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32
THE RECORDS OF GOLD-WASHING.
derived from the Silurian strata, not from the granite. The mining operations practised are simply those of ground-sluicing on a large scale. Considerable work has been done on the placers in Dargo district. The thick­ness of the gravel is from thirty to forty feet. On Mitchell River the gold-workings are confined to the creeks and the older alluvions on the banks. The Wa-ranga fields, Sandhurst district, are among the oldest Vic­torian gold-fields, and have been worked since 1853. The most important of the workings are in the vicinity of Rushworth on a cement deposit, probably of the older pliocene. The gravel is shallow, the deepest shafts being only from thirty-five to fifty-five feet. This lead has yielded more than any other in the district. Nuggety Gully, Cemetery Lead, and Coy Diggings are also placers of note.
New South Wales.—The auriferous districts of New South Wales are considered the richest and most extensive in Australia.-f The gold-fields extend, with short intervals, the entire length of the colony, with a breadth of two hundred miles. Immense tracts in the in­terior still remain unprospected, and in time may prove to contain valuable gold-bearing deposits. Up to 1871 alluvial washings alone were carried on, gold-quartz min­ing being neglected. At this period sixteen thousand miners were at work. The product from 1851 to 1871 inclusive is stated by Reid to have been £26,457,160. The gold regions are all easy of access and are within two days' journey of the capital.
In Bathurst, Tambaroora, Turon, Lachlan, Mudgee, Southern, Peel, and Uralla districts water is scarce, and the discoveries of gold at Temora, Montreal, and Mount Browne have attracted a large number of miners from these places. Water is scarce at Temora also, but for­tunately a large amount of very coarse gold has been found. The Montreal placers are near the sea-coast. The deposits are said to occur in two terraces, and give evi­dence of having been washed back by the sea.