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118                                 GOLD.
Their numbers were greatly reduced by the famine of 1866 ; without exception they are all in the power of the money-lenders, for whom they work at a low rate, and are never able to free themselves of the claims which the latter make on account of advances.
The daily earnings of the gold-washers are small, but might, no doubt, be increased, if it were not that they are always satisfied when enough gold has been found for procuring the day's subsistence.
Colonel Haughton says:—"The Ghasis can always reckon on earning three or four pice per day, and I am assured that a vigorous man often gels as much as twelve annas, which, as the ordinary rate of field labour is about one pice, must be considered a very large sum."* Mr. Robinson found, in a trial which he made at Raobbk, in Oodipur, that men to whom he paid one anna could produce for him from three to four annas worth of gold. Colonel Dalton states that the washers themselves regard it as a very poor trade, simply yielding they say, pet bur (bellyful). Dr. Stoehr, in his Paper on Singhbhum, states that he found the average daily earning to be about 25 centimes (rather more than an anna and a half). The men I met with stated that they could earn about an anna a day, and occasionally three or four annas.
The simplest idea of the process of hydraulic mining which seems so nearly to approach to perfection in Cali­fornia, is not altogether unknown to the natives. Mr. Robinson says:f—" Another plan, and a very remarkable one, in which the people collect the gold, is by drawing up small watercourses before the rains, so as to make places for a deposit of soil carried down by the water; this soil is cleared out several times and in it is found a large deposit of gold."
In the shallow diggings the hydraulic system would not, of course, be applicable ; but even in them an in-
* "Jour. Asiatic Soc. Bengal," vol. xxiii. 1854, p. 109. t Ibid., p. 108.