The Largest Gold Nugget Ever Found on Earth

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  • Опубликовано: 1 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 188

  • @OzGeologyOfficial
    @OzGeologyOfficial  Месяц назад +13

    If you would like to support this channel, consider joining our Patreon: www.patreon.com/OzGeology
    Here's a link to my second channel - PaleoZoology: ruclips.net/channel/UCsg3FupO7inx3UOieayzF1g

    • @bobkoroua
      @bobkoroua Месяц назад +2

      When I was there in 87 there was a nugget that was found by a guy waiting for a bus.
      It was huge.

  • @revolutionaryhamburger
    @revolutionaryhamburger Месяц назад +45

    Warning. Watching this video could give viewers gold fever.

    • @Skilled4dathrill39
      @Skilled4dathrill39 Месяц назад

      Or amplify preexisting gold fever... aaaahhhhhhh! when the narrator said they found it in a dark colored quartz rock...my heart rate skyrocketed... few days ago, while following bears through the forest on my property, I came across a massive tree that had fallen a long time ago, it's root ball were 75% exposed. in the dirt that was where the tree used to be standing was several pieces of quartz among a soap stone vien... out of curiosity I dug up many pieces of quartz, but one was really big and took over an hour to get loose. once loose, lol, I discovered it is about 20 inches by 23 inches, has dar coloring in it and views of black going through it. But when I went to lift it, I discovered that I can hardly lift the thing. and when I did, I could only maintain holding it for about 10 to 15 seconds, it's too heavy and the hillside dirt is too soft. my feet just push the dirt down hill, no way I can carry it anywher. so I'm making a cable pully block mechanismto get it up the hill...
      and now I'm super excited.... please, please, please be a giant gold nugget inside this insanely heavy, rock!

  • @jesseallan3886
    @jesseallan3886 Месяц назад +38

    That is 71kg and some change for those of us who use the metric system.

  • @anothergoldprospector
    @anothergoldprospector Месяц назад +3

    Awesome bit of Victoria's Gold history thanks for your take on the most famous nugget found to date.

  • @Aabergm
    @Aabergm Месяц назад +7

    51 Seconds new PB. Love your vids BTW. Always facinating.

  • @chairmanrexton956
    @chairmanrexton956 27 дней назад +2

    I used to be a mine guide at Sovereign Hill many moons ago, and liked to tell a less detailed version of this story. I had no idea there were some doubts about the finders’ legitimate claim to the nugget though. Fascinating!

  • @dave-hp3rf
    @dave-hp3rf Месяц назад +4

    I am to old now and a disabled war veteran but I always wanted to go after gold ,to anyone in the business there is still plenty of gold in Australia,to those in America some have come and found gold well keep coming.

    • @OzGeologyOfficial
      @OzGeologyOfficial  Месяц назад +1

      Thank you for your service, mate, and for sharing that encouragement. It’s never too late to stay connected to the gold hunting community, and you're absolutely right-there’s still plenty of gold to be found in Australia! It’s incredible how much wealth is still hidden beneath the surface, and for those who can go out there, whether they’re in Australia or even from the US, there’s always a chance to strike it lucky. Your passion for gold hunting lives on, and your words will inspire many to keep searching!

  • @Max_Flashheart
    @Max_Flashheart Месяц назад +9

    Great video. The lesson is move it fast and sell it quick.

    • @MrWombatty
      @MrWombatty 15 дней назад

      Many of those flocking to the Victorian goldfields were extremely keen to become rich from gold, but had no intention of digging for it!

  • @webmaster4980
    @webmaster4980 Месяц назад +17

    Holtermann Nugget, the largest gold specimen ever found, 59 inches (1.5 m) long, weighing 630 pounds (290 kg) and with an estimated gold content of 3,000 troy ounces (93 kg), found at Hill End, near Bathurst,

    • @steventeter3332
      @steventeter3332 Месяц назад +2

      Yeah I was thinking about that God I remember seeing a picture of that nugget and it was damn near up to the guy's armpit

    • @benandjillmchenry9005
      @benandjillmchenry9005 Месяц назад +12

      wasn't a nugget - was an ore specimen....

    • @webmaster4980
      @webmaster4980 Месяц назад +1

      No matter what you label it, it is and has been considered a blood big nugget for nearly 200 years.. however, having said that, understand an even bigger one was found in South America somewhere in the 1990s

    • @peter.wilson
      @peter.wilson Месяц назад

      It's also rumoured that the same mine later found a larger nugget. After removing the first nugget, which took much time and effort and was then still melted down, they broke up the second larger nugget to ease bringing it to the surface.

    • @steventeter3332
      @steventeter3332 Месяц назад

      @@benandjillmchenry9005 A Boulder. To big for a nugget. Won't fit in your pocket.

  • @Radio_FM_3123
    @Radio_FM_3123 Месяц назад +5

    It may contain the "fingerprint" of the instant of supernova explosion
    which is more valuable than the gold itself.

  • @ericvanvlandren8987
    @ericvanvlandren8987 Месяц назад +17

    The “on Earth” qualifier is odd. Has anyone ever found a gold nugget anywhere off Earth?

    • @ManfiCat
      @ManfiCat Месяц назад

      thought the same thing

    • @petert3355
      @petert3355 Месяц назад +1

      Not yet. But pretty sure it WILL happen at some point.

    • @daniellarge9784
      @daniellarge9784 Месяц назад +2

      Yes, gold has been indirectly observed by astronomers. Examination of emission and absorption lines in the electromagnetic spectrum can positively identify both elements and compounds in space. Yes, gold has been detected in the remenents of super novas.

    • @ericvanvlandren8987
      @ericvanvlandren8987 Месяц назад +1

      Surely you would agree there is a world of difference between finding a lump of gold (a nugget) that you can actually touch and using a telescope to detect the spectral lines of gold in the light of some celestial body millions or billions of miles away?
      “Finding a nugget” as a phrase must necessarily encompass the property of “on Earth”.

    • @patster4040
      @patster4040 Месяц назад

      Agree, how would we know if one had been found other than on Earth? But meanwhile the Drake Equation implies one pretty much must have been.😊

  • @Albon29yd
    @Albon29yd Месяц назад +7

    Canadian Gully, Ballarat holds the record of most unearthed nuggets over 1000 ounces.

    • @OzGeologyOfficial
      @OzGeologyOfficial  Месяц назад +2

      It sure is one of the most richest places. The Blacksmith’s Lead, was one of the richest and most celebrated spots in Ballarat’s goldfields, producing staggering amounts of gold that fueled much of the excitement and frenzy during the gold rush.

  • @logic.and.reasoning
    @logic.and.reasoning Месяц назад +10

    We need a 5 degree spead, 50m deep metal detection coil... Dreams are free😊

    • @alaska_gold
      @alaska_gold 11 дней назад

      DIGHEM and its variants have been around since the 1980's.

  • @julieannepatterson3295
    @julieannepatterson3295 Месяц назад +1

    i really enjoy your vids cheers

  • @thedarkmoon2341
    @thedarkmoon2341 18 дней назад +1

    The gold is created in a split second as a result of a electrical discharge of a magnitude few could ever comprehend, I worked around the Gold Reef in South Africa in the mid 70s and even to an amateur geologist the native legends told a much more likely explanation for the creation of gold and other resources and the diamonds too than the academic geologists offered. Everything is millions and billions of years but in an Electric Universe can happen in seconds, minutes and hours. Once you see it you can't unsee it.

  • @rossphilpot7080
    @rossphilpot7080 Месяц назад +5

    I played junior cricket for Moliagul C.C. in the early 90s. We were coached by Dick Deason. I guess he was a descendant of John Deason. I wish I'd known at the time so I could ask him about it.

  • @goss1961
    @goss1961 Месяц назад +3

    Long ago, people used to think gold nuggets were the poop of some magical animal. In the story of the goose that laid golden eggs, it was golden poop originally.
    And the thing about catching a leprechaun and holding on to him until he provides a pot of gold.....think about it.

  • @unoriginalsyn
    @unoriginalsyn Месяц назад +8

    I know I've said it before but I think it's time for Lasseter's Reef ❤

    • @timandrews1613
      @timandrews1613 Месяц назад

      If it's not a fable

    • @unoriginalsyn
      @unoriginalsyn Месяц назад +1

      @@timandrews1613 well I still think it's an important story regardless and I would be interested in OzGeology's take on the wether the geological makeup of the area would support the idea of a gold reef and so on, plus it's a pretty epic story 👍

    • @markissboi3583
      @markissboi3583 Месяц назад +1

      Like a movie made about it
      somwhere near alice springs thought left but now its right near a dry lake its rear as the tassie tiger But if true ? oh boy your name be world famous
      australia Imagine finding it and some locals see you digging & go claim its a sacred site there ancestors once did a dance there & the Govt takes it all
      Tell no one anything just chip a bit away a time wheelbarrow wud do me 1 mile gold that wud plummet the gold price from $3.5k down to $500

    • @OzGeologyOfficial
      @OzGeologyOfficial  Месяц назад +3

      Agreed! It's coming, I started a script on it a few days ago. I'm mainly trying to add in where it could possibly be by reviewing geological structures in the area. I suspect it has something to do with the Petermann ranges, but there's some sources that state Lasseter might've found it in the opposite location of where he claims it was (in the east) so I'm looking at areas there too. Stay tuned!

    • @timandrews1613
      @timandrews1613 Месяц назад

      @@unoriginalsyn Sure is, the Gold he brought back came from somewhere

  • @markissboi3583
    @markissboi3583 Месяц назад +9

    I was told by dunolly locals it was found in doomsday hill where we where married at the Dunolly festival 1980s
    A school girl stubbed her foot on a rock & took it home to show her parents a few days L8tr her father seen the sun shine thru the window on kitchen table and seen it was Gold $2.5k worth the legend of Lasseter's Gold Reef story still fasinates me 1 mile long should be a movie about it see a few Documentrys

  • @chrismalcomson7640
    @chrismalcomson7640 Месяц назад +5

    These days its value as the largest gold nugget ever discovered would at least double its value.

    • @BlueEyed888
      @BlueEyed888 Месяц назад

      So $12 million USD .. ..until a larger nugget is discovered. 😂

  • @OlakalO
    @OlakalO Месяц назад +5

    Another world record held by our humble yet mighty country

  • @rosa9079
    @rosa9079 Месяц назад +2

    When I was very young and 7 decades ago, I read a book about Lassiter’s lost reef. Can’t remember where this was.

  • @Flyingdutchy33
    @Flyingdutchy33 Месяц назад +5

    At the bottom of the sketch it says:
    "THE WELCOME STRANGER" from a photograph by Webber, Jun.

    • @OzGeologyOfficial
      @OzGeologyOfficial  Месяц назад

      In the 19th century, especially during the early years of photography, it wasn't uncommon for some sketches or illustrations to be labeled as "photographs" or "photogravures" if they were reproduced using photographic processes, even though they were originally drawn by hand.

    • @Flyingdutchy33
      @Flyingdutchy33 Месяц назад

      @@OzGeologyOfficial So what it says at the bottom would translate to: "a drawing from a drawing"?

  • @120downunder
    @120downunder Месяц назад +2

    Awesome work 👍

  • @bigjm3143
    @bigjm3143 Месяц назад +2

    Prettiest gold comes from Australia 😊 wish our gold was that pretty on America

  • @Slayeranon
    @Slayeranon Месяц назад +2

    They still finding big nuggets in the golden triangle to this day

  • @Eric_Hutton.1980
    @Eric_Hutton.1980 Месяц назад +5

    @OzGeology Could you please discuss silver in Australia? I think silver gets overshadowed by gold. Is there any platinum in Australia?

    • @daniellarge9784
      @daniellarge9784 Месяц назад +3

      I'm pretty sure the Mt Isa mine has silver and platinum.

    • @OzGeologyOfficial
      @OzGeologyOfficial  Месяц назад +5

      Hey Eric! That's definitely on the agenda. We have a silver mine in St Arnaud in Victoria, but one of the most famous silver mines are in Broken Hill in New South Wales. BHP is actually named after Broken Hill as that's where they started their legacy and I intend to travel there in the near future and get some footage of the huge open cuts there. Stay tuned!

  • @famousfoodd.i.y3737
    @famousfoodd.i.y3737 Месяц назад +1

    Hey mate very interesting video as usual. On another note, I can't find one of your previous videos where you found a gold reef. What has happened to the gold reef you discovered?

  • @lucdaigle2394
    @lucdaigle2394 Месяц назад +1

    The largest mass of gold was found in Western Australia's Beta Hunt mine a few years ago, over 9000 ounces of gold in an under ground mine, the mass was broken due to the actions of mining, which if left to the actions of erosion weathering and time could have eventually become the worlds largest "nugget".

  • @scarabeo52
    @scarabeo52 Месяц назад +5

    Read a report today about some Australian research linking gold nuggets, quartz, and the piezoelectic effect.

    • @markhepworth
      @markhepworth Месяц назад

      Was just reading the same,fascinating!

    • @ninjamoves3642
      @ninjamoves3642 Месяц назад +1

      what's the relationship? Granodiorite?

    • @GoddaryuTUBE
      @GoddaryuTUBE Месяц назад +1

      @@ninjamoves3642 pressure from tectonic activity causes pressure on the quartz which causes the piezoelectric effect and the charge being released all the time over time make quartz act like a magnet for the gold

    • @ninjamoves3642
      @ninjamoves3642 Месяц назад

      @@GoddaryuTUBE 😯 wow, cos of golds conductivity

  • @stucar7677
    @stucar7677 22 дня назад

    Thanks from Cornwall

  • @danielflinn3571
    @danielflinn3571 Месяц назад +1

    Thanks for sharing well done

  • @toddjones1403
    @toddjones1403 Месяц назад +3

    Larger ones are still out there…

    • @MrWombatty
      @MrWombatty 15 дней назад

      Unfortunately, modern highly mechanised mining methods would tend to break up large quartz impregnated nuggets like the Welcome Stranger before they were spotted.
      Same sort of thing happens with diamond & other gemstone mining operations!

  • @robmadaffari6270
    @robmadaffari6270 Месяц назад

    Should do one on the Beta mine discovery a couple of years back. Was an old nickel mine below a salt lake that recently turned up some of the largest gold reefs with free mill gold. Has been well documented.

  • @jeremyborders
    @jeremyborders Месяц назад +3

    I would not no what too do, GOD IS GOOD AND HAS EVERYTHING WE NEED OWN HIS EARTH 🌍 CONGRATULATIONS 👍👑🇮🇱🇺🇸👑☝️🦁🙏

  • @dataglasses
    @dataglasses Месяц назад +1

    We just had a get together for Pete's Gold Adventures there on the weekend, sadly my gold monster did not find an equally as exciting occurrence ......

  • @leenonolee4629
    @leenonolee4629 Месяц назад +1

    Of course greedy people seeing that fortune in gold would declare that the original finders were claim jumping. That is what thieves would always say when they wanted to claim someone else's gold.

  • @MrWombatty
    @MrWombatty 15 дней назад

    Many of those flocking to the Victorian goldfields were extremely keen to become rich from gold, but had no intention of digging for it!

  • @QuickFixTips
    @QuickFixTips Месяц назад +1

    YIKES!! That sure would be worth digging for, yes? HA! Thanks Oz!

  • @ray.shoesmith
    @ray.shoesmith Месяц назад +1

    A bit over $6.5 mill AUD in pure gold weight alone in todays prices

  • @Yakomoe
    @Yakomoe Месяц назад +1

    Lmao all time calculations are based on guess work.

  • @tasd5673
    @tasd5673 Месяц назад +1

    How much for a good gold detector? Is there much up in north qld

    • @geosid1696
      @geosid1696 Месяц назад +1

      There is not much if you dream about. Get out have a crack and let all know how you fare or not.

    • @ninjamoves3642
      @ninjamoves3642 Месяц назад +4

      they didn't find it with one, just a shovel & pick costs $50 at Bunnings

  • @ProspectingLife
    @ProspectingLife Месяц назад +1

    Interesting how the Welcome Stranger “Nugget” contains a large percentage of quartz and still claims it’s “Nugget” title, but the Holtermann Nugget is classed as “gold in matrix/quartz specimen” and not a “Nugget” yet it contained twice as much gold in a single slub than the “quartz filled” Welcome Stranger.

    • @OzGeologyOfficial
      @OzGeologyOfficial  Месяц назад +1

      That's a great observation! The distinction between the Welcome Stranger Nugget and the Holtermann Specimen comes down largely to how the gold was found and the form in which it appeared. The Welcome Stranger is considered a true nugget because it was almost entirely made up of gold, despite some quartz content, and found in an alluvial setting where it was weathered out of its host rock.
      On the other hand, the Holtermann Specimen was a massive slab of gold still embedded in quartz, which is why it's referred to as a "specimen" rather than a nugget. While the Holtermann Specimen contained more gold, its classification comes from it being a large piece of gold still within the rock matrix, rather than a naturally weathered piece of free gold like the Welcome Stranger. Nuggets typically refer to naturally weathered gold that has broken free from the host rock, while specimens, like Holtermann's, are gold still in its original quartz matrix.

    • @ProspectingLife
      @ProspectingLife Месяц назад

      @@OzGeologyOfficial cheers for the clarification mate. Strangely enough I’ll be in HillEnd tomorrow on the hunt for gold nuggets with the trusty detector, so fingers crossed your reply brings me a little luck on the gold. 👍🏽

  • @philbophilbo4945
    @philbophilbo4945 Месяц назад

    Hi. You make great videos. Thank You. Was the Holteman nugget considered to be a nugget or a specimen

    • @adhawk5632
      @adhawk5632 Месяц назад +1

      Speci

    • @SJ-kr1zu
      @SJ-kr1zu Месяц назад

      It was cut from a reef so definitely not a nugget.

  • @dalesmth1
    @dalesmth1 Месяц назад

    I believe there was a nugget found in the western US that weighed in at around 3,200 ounces, or 200 lbs.

  • @Goldpan-SuntanNM
    @Goldpan-SuntanNM Месяц назад

    Now that's what I need to find!

  • @TStheDeplorable
    @TStheDeplorable Месяц назад

    At current prices the gold is worth $6 Million USD.

  • @jasonthompson5324
    @jasonthompson5324 Месяц назад

    Great video once again

  • @jumboegg5845
    @jumboegg5845 Месяц назад +1

    The nugget in the back of the wagon (1:08) looks to be about a metre long and half that in girth. So its more than twice as big as the actual nugget, which it said was about 610 x 310 mm. Or maybe its a hobbit's wagon.

  • @bernadettelanders7306
    @bernadettelanders7306 24 дня назад

    I often wonder if my great grandfather touched the Welcome Stranger Nugget. His name is on the monument as he was the Minister of Mines in Victoria during federation, Henry Foster MLA, he was my paternal grandmothers father, my dad’s mum, Georgina D Foster. Well I like to think he did lol. I’ve seen a replica, it looks fantastic.

  • @christopherslane7830
    @christopherslane7830 11 дней назад

    The title. “Largest on Earth”, makes me wonder what the record is for off Earth.

  • @jeffreywickens3379
    @jeffreywickens3379 Месяц назад

    Fascinating.

  • @jimcockburn4652
    @jimcockburn4652 Месяц назад

    When the Coolgardie goldfield was first found the prospectors called it the "spud patch". I wonder what other goldfields had potato size nuggets.

  • @leongt1954
    @leongt1954 Месяц назад +2

    The Hand Of faith is only 11th on the list of gold nuggets found in Aus the biggest being Welcome Stranger

  • @glassontherocks
    @glassontherocks Месяц назад +1

    How big was the one found on Mars?

  • @LopuDesigns
    @LopuDesigns Месяц назад

    Bloke recently found a potato nug here in VIC 🙏 bought a Pajero with it 🙌🙌🙌

  • @williambristow9610
    @williambristow9610 Месяц назад +2

    I thought the golden eagle from wa was the biggest

  • @allinski
    @allinski Месяц назад

    My Dad used to prospect Dunolly, i wnrt with him a couple of times as a little fella. He found a few nuggets over the years.

  • @lorditsprobingtime6668
    @lorditsprobingtime6668 Месяц назад +1

    I find this, plus google results confusing and I'm pretty sure wrong. I seem to remember it being something about definition of "nugget" vs "specimen" or possibly the fact that the one I have ties to, and even a bunch of the original photographs broke in half while being winched out of the mine at Hill End., Looking at the google results the Welcome Stranger weighed 79 kgs and the biggest specimen "Pepita Canaã" is stated as being nearly 61 kgs while Holterman's nugget at nearly 5 foot tall weighed TWO HUNDRED AND NINETY Kilograms! Is there something I'm somehow missing here? It seems to me, whichever way you describe it, that's a LOT bigger.
    I'm not trying to be argumentative and even google search for largest nugget OR specimen name other ones yet Holtermand was more than three times the size of the Welcome Stranger. Google conflicts with itself so, it's very confusing. I can say with certainty, with Holterman standing beside it, it's huge!

    • @redtobertshateshandles
      @redtobertshateshandles Месяц назад

      Victoria just can't give up it's status as superior.
      The rest of us know the reality.

    • @OzGeologyOfficial
      @OzGeologyOfficial  Месяц назад +5

      I see where the confusion comes from, and it mostly revolves around how we define a "nugget" versus a "specimen." The Welcome Stranger is considered the largest nugget because it was almost entirely gold, despite being found with some quartz and soil material-it’s essentially a solid mass of gold. On the other hand, the Holtermann Nugget, although much larger in overall size and weight, was primarily a gold specimen with a significant amount of quartz. The quartz made up a large part of its size and weight, which is why it’s not classified as a nugget. So, while the Holtermann Nugget was enormous and impressive, the Welcome Stranger's near-pure gold content makes it the largest true nugget. This distinction in gold content and composition is why there seems to be conflicting information online.

    • @lorditsprobingtime6668
      @lorditsprobingtime6668 Месяц назад

      @@OzGeologyOfficial Ah, thanks for that. It's along the lines of what I sort of remembered. I did read that there was a lot of other material and the figure I quoted for weight was including that. Even so, the amount of gold was still greater so I still can't help feeling a bit cheated by the classification of it neither being the biggest nugget OR the biggest specimen. Family pride plays a part but, it still did contain more gold than the others, so there lol.
      In my efforts years ago I dredged for gold, trying to make a living at it but failed. I only ever found 1 piece of gold metal detecting but, while only about 3 pennyweight it was straight off a reef and only a little over 1mm thick but woven through quartz which I repeatedly got glowing red hot then dropping it into cold water, bit by bit shattering the quartz away to reveal what was fairly delicate and through an optical loupe was very finely detailed and absolutely beautiful. I really wish I'd kept it but, I was trying to earn a living so had to try not to be sentimental about any of the gold I found dredging too. Now I have just 1 little tiny piece only worth about $5 in weight. I still do have fond memories of my few years of doing that full time, despite the hardship it was beautiful mountainous country on a clear running river and never regret it at all.
      Thanks for the help explaining it, I still think it's wrong based on the actual amount of gold though containing 93kg of gold. It also helps confuse things when they call it: "holterman's nugget" too.
      Oddly if you search "what was the biggest specimen" it comes up with that "Pepita Canaã", at least they do till slightly different wording gives a result from Australian Geographic of:
      " 19 October marks the 150th anniversary of the discovery of the Holtermann Nugget, the world’s largest gold specimen. ".
      It seems even the experts are conflicted about it. Either way, I'd much rather have found Holtermans one with it's extra weight in gold.
      EDIT And a PS: The mine was "was found in 1872 at the Star of Hope Gold Mine, Hill End " and though I haven't seen him mentioned anywhere on google so far, Holterman had a partner and it used to be referred to as "The Holterman Byers mine". Whispers among the family hint at some degree of "skullduggery" but, no facts about any of that.

    • @lorditsprobingtime6668
      @lorditsprobingtime6668 Месяц назад

      @@redtobertshateshandles Don't worry, there's still gold in NSW, even being mined now. Victoria seems to be the area where the most surprises come from but, a mate headed up into the northern Territory and came back with some REALLY good finds. One I held in my hot little hand was rock and mostly gold and it was found to have 80 ounces in it! Unfortunately, I knew he could outrun me lol.

  • @jerrycornelius5986
    @jerrycornelius5986 Месяц назад

    Are you sure there weren’t bigger nuggets that got melted down during the last five thousand years or more?

  • @charliestaples9899
    @charliestaples9899 Месяц назад +5

    Tha Holtermann find nugget, found at Hillend NSW during the gold rush in 1872was the biggest nugget ever found weighing in at 3000 troy ozs

    • @adhawk5632
      @adhawk5632 Месяц назад +4

      It was a speci, not a true nugget.

    • @nothinggrand3805
      @nothinggrand3805 Месяц назад +4

      It is the largest specimen of gold ever found but it wasn’t a gold nugget. It’s quartz reef.

    • @SJ-kr1zu
      @SJ-kr1zu Месяц назад +2

      It was a slab cut from a reef which is not a nugget.

    • @charliestaples9899
      @charliestaples9899 Месяц назад +2

      Both the Welcome Stranger and Holtermann "nuggets" were both intrinsically mixed with quartz, slate and other minerals. The extracted gold weight for the Welcome Stranger was measured in at 2284 troy ozs. The Holtermann nugget gold weighed in at 3000 troy ozs.

    • @nothinggrand3805
      @nothinggrand3805 Месяц назад +1

      @@charliestaples9899 that doesn’t matter. Gold nuggets are found in alluvial deposits while the holtermann nugget was found in a hard rock deposit.

  • @David-z7n5y
    @David-z7n5y Месяц назад

    You’d probably like chatting with a bloke named John Tully

  • @leannevandekew1996
    @leannevandekew1996 Месяц назад

    Should've put in a shrimp on the barbie.

  • @NelsonZAPTM
    @NelsonZAPTM Месяц назад

    Oh yeah?
    We have pineapple lumps.

  • @sockpuppetbitme
    @sockpuppetbitme Месяц назад +3

    A bit repetitive.

  • @marclouisb
    @marclouisb Месяц назад +1

    Kill the useless distracting background music

  • @alexsetterington3142
    @alexsetterington3142 Месяц назад

    Was a fairly big alien what laid y'nugget

  • @3209-f4h
    @3209-f4h Месяц назад

    Or is this 3 pieces put together for a new record?

  • @sophdog1678
    @sophdog1678 Месяц назад

    What became of Deeson and Oates?

    • @OzGeologyOfficial
      @OzGeologyOfficial  Месяц назад +4

      John Deason made some poor investments and ended up losing a significant portion of the wealth he gained from the nugget. He later returned to farming in the area. Despite the initial fortune, his financial situation did not remain prosperous in the long term due to those bad investments.
      Richard Oates, on the other hand, had a more stable outcome. He purchased land and lived out the rest of his life comfortably as a farmer. Unlike Deason, Oates managed to avoid financial ruin and maintained a relatively secure lifestyle.

    • @sophdog1678
      @sophdog1678 Месяц назад +3

      @@OzGeologyOfficial Many thanks

  • @williamgriffing4263
    @williamgriffing4263 Месяц назад

    Troy or apathacary?

  • @Hossak
    @Hossak Месяц назад +32

    Why do people always use ounces to calculate gold value. Gold is 120 per gram. 1kg is 120 000 and sp on. Grams are just easier. Great video.

    • @jessedrabble
      @jessedrabble Месяц назад +21

      Lots of us know an ounce is 28 grams...for reasons

    • @olsim1730
      @olsim1730 Месяц назад

      ​@@jessedrabblewhatyatalkinabeet?yewfukndruggo 😅

    • @ChuckyMcNubbin72
      @ChuckyMcNubbin72 Месяц назад +36

      Except gold is measured as a troy ounce, which is 31.103 grams. ​@jessedrabble

    • @deanstevenson6527
      @deanstevenson6527 Месяц назад +5

      After purification, that's 71.04034 kilograms. Have a nice day. 🥝✔️

    • @geosid1696
      @geosid1696 Месяц назад +6

      If the welcome stranger revealed it's friend to me....ounces or in grams mean zero😆

  • @r.ramjet5060
    @r.ramjet5060 Месяц назад

    its a dog

  • @thesnaggletooth19
    @thesnaggletooth19 Месяц назад +3

    All this discussion about the alphabet people, inclusiveness and anti-discrimination and no one is mentioning the lack of a 'H' for heterosexual or 'S' for straight !

  • @lutomson3496
    @lutomson3496 Месяц назад

    meanwhile here in california we have had large nuggets and the last auction made millions this is nothing

    • @OzGeologyOfficial
      @OzGeologyOfficial  Месяц назад +4

      How can you call the largest nugget ever discovered nothing lmao. It's monumental. Australia has historically produced far more large gold nuggets than California. Some of the largest gold nuggets ever found have come from Australia, particularly in the state of Victoria during its gold rush era in the 19th century. California had a significant gold rush, but it did not produce as many large nuggets compared to Australia. Most of California’s gold was found in smaller flakes or grains rather than large, intact nuggets.

  • @Clarence_13x
    @Clarence_13x Месяц назад +1

    There are bigger nuggets identified from space by a USGS survey of the southwestern United States, the results of which released in early 2023. Everyone else seems lazy here, I keep finding them. I’m sure other people need a leg up. Look at the maps and just grab the alluvial stuff.

  • @redtobertshateshandles
    @redtobertshateshandles Месяц назад

    Conspiracy theories ??
    I'm heartily sick of them.

    • @JohnH12131
      @JohnH12131 Месяц назад +2

      What conspiracy theories? This is a proven find.