The Great Round World and What Is Going On In It, Vol. 1, No. 39, August 5, 1897 - A Weekly Magazine for Boys and Girls by Various
page 21 of 39 (53%)
page 21 of 39 (53%)
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They build great fires on the top of the gravel, and fix them so that
they shall burn all night. When morning comes about eighteen inches of the ground beneath the fire is found to be thawed out. This surface is shovelled away, and another fire built on the gravel where it is frozen again. They keep right on in this slow and tedious way, until finally the pay-dirt is reached. The yield from these new gold-fields is something wonderful. It is greater than anything ever recorded in the history of gold mining. [Illustration: ALASKA: YUKON VALLEY AND GOLD FIELDS. (The State of Pennsylvania is inserted to show comparative size.)] One miner, who is a thoroughly experienced man, declares that he is absolutely amazed at the amount of gold that has already been produced. He says that the work has only been commenced, and that this present find which is setting people crazy is nothing to the gold that will be discovered as soon as the miners really get to work. He stated that, in addition to the rich pay-dirt we have already spoken of, there were veins of gold in the rocks underneath, which veins appeared to grow richer the farther they were probed. In his opinion the gold deposits of the Yukon region form the mother vein of all the gold in North America. Many people are hurrying to the Klondike district from all parts, and the excitement is intense. |
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