A Forgotten Legacy of Gold Mining: Archival Research Leads to the Location and Identification of Gold-Bearing Mining Residue
    
    - Organization:
 - The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
 - Pages:
 - 2
 - File Size:
 - 61 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jan 1, 1997
 
Abstract
Gold was discovered in the Bendigo area of Victoria in 1851  (Willman and Wilkinson, 1993), and all the early gold mining of  any note involved washing (puddling) the gold out of the regolith  or alluvium. The waste material from this process was a  semi-fluid mixture of rock debris, soil and water, referred to as  `sludge'. Puddling machines were gradually introduced to speed  up the puddling process (Cole, 1994), and by 1855 an estimated  2000 machines were in the district (Anderson, 1978). In 1859 it  was estimated that approximately 2 293 000 m3 of material was  puddled annually by the machines on the eastern side of the  goldfield, whose waste drained into Bendigo Creek and its  tributary gullies. It was also estimated that after the gold was  removed, approximately one-quarter of the residue/sludge  consisted of the heavier, coarse-grained material which settled out  fairly quickly, while the remainder, approximately 1 720 000 m3,  was the fine-grained material which flowed downstream for some  distance (VPP, 1859 - 60). From these figures it can be assumed  that for the ten years during which this volume of puddling was  maintained (1854 - 1864) over 5 700 000 m3 of gravels and sands  and 17 200 000 m3 of fine-grained sludge had been discharged  into and around Bendigo Creek. This was enough to cover an  area of over 400 km2 to a depth of 5 cm. By 1859 the problems associated with the sheer volume of  sludge being discharged were such that a Royal Commission was  appointed to `Enquire into the Best Method of Removing the  Sludge from the Gold Fields' (VPP, 1859 - 60). The goldfields  referred to were those in the Bendigo area around the township of  Sandhurst (now known as Bendigo). The Report of the  Commission (VPP, 1859 - 60) stated that: `... inspection of the  country bordering upon the course of the Bendigo Creek, to a  distance of about fifty miles from Sandhurst . . . ' had revealed  that the sludge had ' . . . filled up watercourses and flooded  pasture lands . . . '. It also noted that ' . . . even on the plains,  thirty or forty miles away from Sandhurst, where the sludge flows  thin, and is relieved from its heavier particles, we found it baked  into a perfect concrete, and in thicknesses varying up to two feet  or more . . . '. The italics were used for emphasis in the original  text. As it was considered unlikely that the physical evidence for  such widespread inundation would have disappeared completely  over the intervening 130 or so years, a project was initiated to  locate any evidence of the inundation in the current landscape. If  such evidence were to be found, then an estimate could be made  of both its extent and its effects on the topography, drainage, and  land-use of the inundated area. Extensive field work has  determined that over 700 km2 to the north of Bendigo was  inundated by the sludge. The area has not been uniformly  covered, but has occasional `inliers' which have obviously  escaped inundation by being slightly higher than the surrounding  areas. Today the sludge is readily identified as a very  fine-grained, hard-setting, concrete-like `capping' overlying a  well-developed, well-structured, pedal horizon, or in some  instances, the gravels and sands of a creek bed. The thickness of  the sludge capping varies between a few centimetres and three  metres (Peterson, 1996). The buried topography was gently  undulating, in direct contrast with the almost unnatural flatness of
Citation
APA: (1997) A Forgotten Legacy of Gold Mining: Archival Research Leads to the Location and Identification of Gold-Bearing Mining Residue
MLA: A Forgotten Legacy of Gold Mining: Archival Research Leads to the Location and Identification of Gold-Bearing Mining Residue. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1997.