Bulletin 121 The History and Development of Gold Dredging in Montana

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 95
- File Size:
- 5051 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1916
Abstract
Many articles have been written on the general principles and details
of gold dredging, a but it is not possible within the limits of this
paper to recapitulate them, and it is thus necessary to assume some
knowledge of this literature by the readers of this paper.
Although the purpose of this paper is to describe gold dredging
in Montana, a brief mention of some early appliances used in New
Zealand, Australia, and California may serve as a world-connecting
link in our consideration of the development of gold dredging. DREDGES EARLY USED IN NEW ZEALAND, AUSTRALIA, AND
CALIFORNIA.
Spoon dredges operated by hand were tried in New Zealand on
rich spots in the Clutha River with some success as early as 1865.
A dredge of this kind is shown in Plate I, A. In 1870 a modification
of the spoon, operated by steam and being thus a primitive steamshovel
dredge, was worked in New Zealand. Steam-shovel dredging
was attempted in California as early as 1888 and 1893, and with
some success in later years. The elevator gold dredge with endless
bucket chain was put into operation in New Zealand in 1882. Plate
I, B, illustrates a type of this dredge operated by current wheels.
Plate II, A, shows a steam-operated dredge of this class, also started
in 1882. In 1897 R. H. Postlethwaite, connected with the Risdon
Iron Works, San Francisco, introduced the dredging practice of New
Zealand into California. The first dredge built sank in the turbulent
current of the Yuba. The second at Oroville, owned and operated
by W. P. Hammon, proved effective and was the start in California
of successful gold dredging. Since then the growth of the golddredging
industry in California has been so rapid that the gold output
from dredges in that State exceeds that of all other States in the
Union, and, in fact, of any other country of the world, the value of
the gold produced in California by dredging from 1897 to the end
of 1914 having been about $71,000,000.
Citation
APA:
(1916) Bulletin 121 The History and Development of Gold Dredging in MontanaMLA: Bulletin 121 The History and Development of Gold Dredging in Montana. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1916.