Mapped: Areas where Australians are striking gold
Amalgamated Prospectors and Leaseholders Association of Western Australia President James Allison told the Kalgoorlie Miner the two men uncovered the treasure at Sandstone, a small town some 400km northwest of Kalgoorlie-Boulder.
Mr Allison said the two men, who had been prospecting for decades, came across a one-ounce nugget worth more than $5000.
Later that day, the pair hit the jackpot again when their detector picked up a second sound.
The men dug up and unearthed another piece weighing 895 grams, worth a whopping $161,000, according to the Perth Mint spot price as of June.
Victoria is also on the cusp of a whole new gold rush, with bush blocks where owners have found the odd nugget becoming hot property.
Towns across the state's former gold fields, and especially in the golden triangle bounded by Bendigo, Ballarat and Wedderburn, have wannabe prospectors hunting for cheap land to hunt for the valuable mineral.
With the price of gold surging over the past decade the leading lobby group believes more and more people will be looking to stake a claim to an alluvial address.
Prospectors and Mining Association of Victoria President Jason Cornish said more people had begun looking to buy a cheap bush block amid fears the state government would turn Crown land — where prospecting is currently legal — into national parks, where it is not.
Stockdale & Leggo Bendigo Sales Manager Grant Hosking said he was seeing good numbers of retirees relocating from Melbourne to take up a prospecting hobby in their golden years.
Buyers have been homing in on blocks anywhere from 4ha to 40ha.
'In Wedderburn, property has never sold that quick, but we are selling them very, very quickly at the moment — and getting good prices for them,' Mr Hosking said.
'And most of it is weekenders and hobby prospectors.'
The Australian Government Geoscience Australia website shows a map of where gold is likely to be found and which states have greater sources of gold.
It says gold is mostly found in rocks, and WA accounted for 60 per cent of Australia's gold discoveries.
Primary deposits, where miners target, were in Kalgoorlie in the Super Pit, Granny Smith, St Ives, Norseman and Mount Magnet all in WA, Gympie and Ravenswood Qld, Callie NT, Stawell Vic, Cadia NSW, Henty Tas and Challenger in SA.
Gold is also found in Olympic Dam, SA – the area is mined with copper and uranium.
'Mostly, gold is spread throughout the rocks and soil around us but in such low amounts that it's not worthwhile trying to get it out,' the website said.
'However, there are some places where there is enough gold to make it economic to mine.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

News.com.au
43 minutes ago
- News.com.au
Diggers and Dealers: Is gold M&A done or is it just heating up?
Gold miners are the toast of the town at Kalgoorlie's Diggers and Dealers, but intrigue abounds on the next M&A deal Big producers are cashed up, but wary bad M&A could ruin the gold boom Junior developers could be more attractive to mid-tiers, but now have the institutional backing to go it alone Money has flowed freely for gold producers in the past two years underpinning a long overdue period of consolidation in the Australian gold space. De Grey Mining took a scrip deal for Northern Star Resources (ASX:NST) to develop its Hemi mine. Gold Road Resources (ASX:GOR) looks to be on the way out with a logical $3.7bn acquisition by its 50-50 JV partner in the Gruyere mine, Gold Fields. Andrew Forrest-backed Greatland Resources (ASX:GGP) has emerged as the owner of the Telfer gold mine after a US$475m purchase from Newmont Corporation (ASX:NEM). Westgold Resources (ASX:WGX) swallowed Karora Resources, owner of the Beta Hunt gold mine. And Ramelius Resources (ASX:RMS) last week formally converted its stake in Spartan Resources into a merger to grab control of the Dalgaranga gold mine and Never Never gold discovery. The low hanging fruit, the obvious stuff, appears to be gone – sans an often discussed merger between Leonora region competitors Vault Minerals (ASX:VAU) and Raleigh Finlayson's Genesis Minerals (ASX:GMD), which if investment bankers had their way would reunite the old Sons of Gwalia assets under a single roof (one owned by SOG founders the Lalor brothers' nephew Raleigh Finlayson). So, has consolidation run its course, or is the record cash generation stirred by a rising gold price simply creating a fertile environment for more to come? We checked the temperature of a host of miners across the junior and senior end of the gold market at the Diggers and Dealers conference in Kalgoorlie yesterday. Brothers in arms After last year being cheekily placed one after another, Ramelius' Mark Zeptner and Spartan's Simon Lawson, now the deputy chair of the Mt Magnet gold miner, presented together. Talking to media together, Zeptner said the combination of Dalgaranga and Mt Magnet, slated to make the company a 500,000ozpa miner by 2030, will be the company's main focus now, even with a $784 million warchest to pursue further deals. But he doesn't think miners will be put off by the high gold price if they want to deal. "There is a school of thought that you shouldn't do deals at the top of the gold price. I probably believe you do them when you can and as long as you're applying reasonable gold prices in your assumptions, you do them when you can," he said. "Otherwise, you might be waiting a long time for a gold price low. Like I said that before, so who knows whether there's ever been a bit of a wave and we have a bit of a lull? Not sure." Lawson said the momentum was there for gold M&A to continue. A company run by a former colleague of Lawson's – Darren Stralow's Bellevue Gold (ASX:BGL) – is known to be a potential target though a recent downgrade has reset expectations, the former Spartan boss and Northern Star geo noted. He suggested the enlarged scale of Ramelius could, for the first time, make it a more attractive acquisition target for a larger fish. "I'm not going to put words in Mark's mouth, but I think Ramelius is just going to be sitting, watching what's going on and focusing on its knitting," he said. "I still think that there's a fair bit of interest. I think maybe the combination has actually made Ramelius combined a bit of a target for bigger players." Careful what you wish for Other miners think M&A continues, with cash balances across ASX gold miners nudging $8bn and around $1.6bn added to coffers in the June quarter with prices now around US$3350/oz. Northern Star MD Stuart Tonkin thinks a pullback in gold equities, down around 20% in the past month and a half before a 3.6% bump on Monday, could be catalyst to motivate more M&A. Evolution Mining (ASX:EVN) MD Lawrie Conway, however, warned miners around being too optimistic, saying the gold price would retrace at some point. "If we get through this cycle and the cash isn't there, then you have a real risk that we lose shareholders," he said. "Our job and we continue to make sure that we have our projects well sequenced and timed, if companies can do that, if companies don't rush out and and just buy assets for the sake of growth, then that will be a really good outcome, because at some point the gold price is going to come down. "I think it's fair to say what we've said for the last 12 months – that there's a time to do deals and there's a time to make money. And right now, it's time to make money. "Our view is that there will be an asset that's for us and a good fit for us at the right time. Right now there's nothing that we're seeing in the market that fits with us." Junior junctures While the big end of town has been the focus for M&A as large producers and mid-tiers seek growth and mine lives, there are calls for more consolidation at the junior end. Even with high prices, BDO Head of Global Natural Resources Sherif Andrawes says more M&A will happen, especially with scrip becoming the chosen form of tender. "What that means is the ratio stays the same pretty much even, though both sides are high. So that works out quite nicely," he said. "What we're going to see going forward I think, is some more of that but also more of the smaller players coming through and more deals in the scrip space rather than in the cash space." " I think we'll certainly see some more mergers at the bottom end of the market and potentially for the right ones, we might see some cash deals from the bigger companies who've got lots of cash." One junior which has built its identity on M&A is Brightstar Resources (ASX:BTR), with a string of deals turning the one time penny stock into a $250m developer. It is planning to produce around 35-40,000ozpa from a tolling operation in WA's Goldfields, the result of a string of deals, with a broader 70,000ozpa+ operation to be established in a couple years once it has refurbished a processing plant near the town of Laverton. But a larger ambition exists to become a 200,000ozpa miner by the end of the decade through the development of a larger hub around the Mid West WA town of Sandstone, where the final piece of the puzzle is likely to come via a scheme deal to acquire Aurumin (ASX:AUN), taking BTR's resource base there beyond 2Moz. MD Alex Rovira thinks majors and mid-tiers will increasingly look at junior deposit owners to fuel growth – a $189m scrip bid by Capricorn Metals (ASX:CMM) for Warriedar Resources (ASX:WA8) is one example. It will also be key for companies like Brightstar to build scale and join that mid-tier class. "We've obviously been pretty strong advocates for M&A for the last two years, and we've done a number of schemes and takeovers," he said. "I think for us the journey the over the last two years has been let's get scale, let's get some projects that are naturally synergistic with each other into the same portfolio. "Let's get that critical mass so we've actually got something that can support a 200,000 ounce per annum producer." "If Brightstar was to get acquired by a mid-tier or a major, it's going to be for the growth profile that we can show." Not the endgame But becoming a pawn in an M&A endgame is not a given for junior developers, many of whom are sitting on big gains this year. With gold prices surging, juniors like Astral Resources (ASX:AAR), which owns the 1.8Moz Mandilla and Feysville projects near Kalgoorlie, are no longer easy prey. Astral was previously thought of as a logical play for Gold Fields, which owns an underfed mill at the nearby St Ives gold mine. But now, the $213m company has its own clout, boasting a share register with a rising number of institutions. That gives it the capacity to raise quick capital, a bulwark against predatory M&A because its assets have a serious pathway to development. "When you've got 5% institutional holding and you're approaching a DFS stage and a final investment decision, the market looks at you and goes, well, how are you going to raise $100 million of equity when you are primarily funded by mums and dads?" Ducler told Stockhead. "We are a very different company to that today, but similarly across that developer space, when the instos are there and you have the ability to fund your project, you can run it funding the project and building the project. "Then from an M&A perspective, if someone wants to come, they don't have the luxury of time anymore because we will be able to move towards development." Other deals are on the lips of delegates though, after The Australian floated talk of a rebuffed $400m takeover offer for New Murchison Gold (ASX:NMG) from Meeka Metals (ASX:MEK).

News.com.au
2 hours ago
- News.com.au
Property experts warns of Vic growth killers
Investors chasing cheap houses in regional Victoria could be buying into growth traps, with leading experts warning soaring prices in towns like Mildura and Shepparton may not last. PropTrack data reveals Mildura was the busiest regional market in the state over the past financial year, with 706 homes changing hands. Shepparton was next at 632, then Traralgon, 530, Warrnambool, 473, and Armstrong Creek, 455. RELATED: Surf mad Damien Oliver lists Jan Juc beach shack Shock way Aus home cost hike could lock in rate cut High sales volumes have sparked speculation investor activity is returning to the regions, but experts are urging buyers to tread carefully. OpenCorp chief executive Cam McLellan said regional towns had been distorted by lifestyle demand. 'That's not investment grade growth it's emotional overshooting,' Mr McLellan said. 'Price growth is short lived as long term demand doesn't pressure supply levels.' He said he advises his clients to not invest in regional Victorian markets. 'Selling a metro property with limited new land and strong local jobs to buy into a regional area with cheap land and weaker demand isn't a trade-up, it's a trade-off,' Mr McLellan said. 'Most regional towns have an oversupply of land, that's a long-term growth killer. 'Prices might spike temporarily from lifestyle demand or affordability pressures, but once new land is released or migration slows, growth flattens out.' Mortgage Choice broker Rhys Elmi said while buyer interest was soaring across Victoria, regional investment was becoming harder to justify. Mr Elmi said while some regional buyers were driven by affordability or lifestyle changes, most first-home buyers and investors still aimed to secure houses rather than units, even if it meant compromising on location. 'There needs to be a bit of a mindset shift,' he said. 'Start small, build equity, and turn that first property into an investment later. 'That's how you build long-term wealth.' Regional Victoria Top 20 Suburbs By Sales Volumes Suburb Property Type Number sold 12 months Mildura House 706 Shepparton House 632 Traralgon House 530 Warrnambool House 473 Armstrong Creek House 455 Warragul House 401 Morwell House 370 Wodonga House 363 Lara House 357 Wangaratta House 347 Torquay House 339 Drouin House 330 Horsham House 303 Ocean Grove House 293 Alfredton House 292 Corio House 291 Highton House 276 Sebastopol House 266 Sale House 266 Mount Duneed House 240


The Australian
2 hours ago
- The Australian
Editorial: Private sector job creation is too slow
In today's workplace climate, trench warfare between unions and business will not help lift the skills base and drive better productivity to the benefit of workers' living standards and companies' profits. One issue that needs to be addressed is the alarming collapse in private-sector job creation, reported by Simon Benson on Monday. While employment figures appear buoyant on the surface, labour market data shows that more than four out of five jobs – 82 per cent – created across the past two years were government-funded positions, either public service positions or jobs in the non-market sector (often in the care economy and in healthcare and education), funded by taxpayers and driven by government spending decisions. The data marks a dramatic reversal of normal labour market patterns in which the private sector typically contributes about two-thirds of total job creation in Australia. The trend suggests effective stimulus of the private sector, at minimal cost to taxpayers, could be beneficial: through workplace reforms, relief on payroll tax (levied by the states) or changes to work-from-home rules. Popular as working from home is with many staff, especially those with long commutes, it is problematic for many businesses. That is clear from reactions on Tuesday to Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan's plan to enshrine in law the right for private and public sector employees to work from home two days a week if they can do their jobs at home. Business NSW chief executive Daniel Hunter said Victoria's proposed 'blanket rule on WFH' would make it 'harder and less appealing' to do business. NSW (where Premier Chris Minns wants government workers in the office as least three days a week) 'may well be the beneficiary of that', Mr Hunter said. Working from home should be a matter for employers to manage in consultation with staff, he said: 'More red tape doesn't help. Government mandates about WFH create a one-size-fits-all approach to productivity. To grow our collective prosperity, we need to ensure that businesses are given the opportunity to thrive and deal with their workforce directly.' That applies to other workplace issues, too. South Australian Business Chamber chief executive Andrew Kay said investors were looking for a more welcoming environment for their capital. Victorian Chamber of Commerce and Industry chief executive Paul Guerra warned of businesses moving interstate. The issue should be pursued at the roundtable. IR policies also might be influenced by a Productivity Commission report to be published next Monday, Building a Skilled and Adaptable Workforce. Anthony Albanese said on Monday that he and his ministers were the ultimate decision-makers and would not be shackled by ideas being pushed by the commission or unions. On the basis of ACTU arguments and the commission's net zero and business tax reports, the roundtable is at risk of becoming a conduit for higher tax, bigger spending and bigger government. Those trends are already driving unsustainable labour market distortions, with a major shift to jobs funded through budget spending. As Australian Industry Group chief executive Innes Willox told The Australian, job creation has become unsustainably dependent on governments. While the public sector was the least productive part of the economy, growing regulation had raised the costs of private sector job generation, he said. Job mobility had declined while excess vacancies and skills shortages had disrupted businesses. The fact the private sector added just 53,000 new jobs last year while government-supported sectors added 670,000 jobs over two years points to the need for workplace and productivity reform. As Mr Willox said, the issue must be part of roundtable debate.