Centenary Conference - AusIMM

- Organization:
- The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 4
- File Size:
- 487 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1993
Abstract
Reviewer: P.R. Janisch The progress of mining and metallurgy in Australia and their contribution to that nation's economy closely parallel those of South Africa. Australia's was the second of the three great gold rushes of the nineteenth century. It was centred on Bendigo and Ballarat in Victoria, and occurred in the 1850's, a few years after California's forty-niners. The California goldfield also gave birth to the now common term for a tabular gold bearing deposit-a 'reef'. Amongst the fortune-seekers were sailors who had jumped ship on hearing of the riches to be found on land. When the gold ran out, and with it the money, the sailors found themselves stuck on a reef'. But others, more canny, had accumulated the means to move on, and some came to the Transvaal on the news of the Barberton discoveries. One of them was George Harrison.
Citation
APA: (1993) Centenary Conference - AusIMM
MLA: Centenary Conference - AusIMM. The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1993.