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DISCOVERT OF GOLD.
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CHAPTER X.
THE VICTORIA GOLD FIELDS.
Discovery of gold—Streets paved with gold-—Another hundredweight— Effects on labour—Official returns—Intelligence from the mines—Ballarat
—The Pyrenees—Melbourne—Mount Alexander—Prospects of Victoria— Route to the diggings—Forest Creek—The auriferous fever—The Gover­nor his own groom—Reversed positions—Lake Omeo—The gold region— Mount Blackwood—New and extensive gold fields.
On the 25th of August 1851, Lieut. Governor Latrohe wrote from Melhourne to Earl Grey that large deposits of gold had been found in the colony, thus proving the extension of the New South Wales gold field throughout the great dividing range, "Victoria forming its southern extremity. Three locali­ties were first discovered,— Clunes diggings, where gold was found in an alluvium of decomposed quartz rock; Buninyong, or rather Ballarat, by which name the locality is best known, where gold was imbedded in compact quartz; and at Deep Creek, only sixteen miles from Melbourne, where the precious metal was found in contact with slate rock. It was afterwards dug up in the city of Melbourne itself.
Governor Latrobe having issued a proclamation, and made arrangements for granting licenses similar to those of New South Wales, the population poured forth from the city and