Chinese Miners
Eureka Stockade
Early Mining Methods
Gold
Life on the Goldfields
100

Why were the Chinese more successful in their gold mining over the Europeans?

They worked in large groups and were allocated tasks. They also re-worked claims that were abandoned.

100

When did the Eureka Stockade begin?

1854

100

What is cradling?


‘With the operation of **** you are perhaps already acquainted: for the sake of others, however, I shall here describe it as clearly as I can. The instrument is about six or eight feet long, with its head covered with a coarse sieve, and its foot perforated with a hole. To work this machine close to a stream or a water-hole it requires four men - one to dig, another to wheel, a third to rock, and a fourth to keep dashing the water on the earth to effect the sifting process. The sieve prevents the coarse stones from falling into the ****, whilst the water gradually softens and washes away the earth, which is carried away by the foot of the machine, leaving the particles of gold mixed with sand behind some small cleets which, at given intervals, are nailed across the bottom all the way down. When all the earth is washed away, the rocker and the washer cast their longing eyes into the sieve to see if there be a “nugget” too large to get through the holes, and, if not, the sieve is displaced, and the stones thrown away. This is the process carried on from “morn till dewy eve”

100

What are the properties of gold?

Ductile, shiny yellow colour, metal, does not tarnish (rust).

100

Why did so many people get sick while at the goldfields?

Primitive conditions, poor sanitation, contagious diseases.

200

What shape did the Chinese miners make their mine-shafts?

They made round mine-shafts.

200

Who was the Eureka Stockade led by?

Peter Lalor

200

What is fossicking?

I have been on all the olden fields of Victoria - over their flats, through their gullies, and amongst their reefs. I have **** on their surface (**** means picking, prying, or examining minutely), examined their shafts, crawled through their drives, and worked in their quartz tunnels.

200

What makes gold so valuable?

Used in jewellery, symbol of wealth, it is extremely rare; and the shiny, yellow colour is attractive and beautiful.

200

How did the Indigenous Australians suffer as a result of the gold mining?

The landscape was destroyed from the mining so the natural habitat or home of the Indigenous were destroyed as result.

300

Why did the Chinese miners make their mine-shafts round?

They were superstitious and believed that evil spirits lurked in corners.

300

Where did the Eureka Stockade occur?

Ballarat, Victoria

300

What is nuggeting?

‘In new ground holes are sunk of every shape and of every size, with a distance of six or ten feet betwixt each hole. They sink till they come upon what is called the bottom, and if they see the bottom is good they commence immediately to tunnel as fast as they can... Having bottomed our hole (the bottom is generally pipe-clay), we pick up a good deal of gold - suppose four ounces - ... Picking the gold up thus we call ‘****.’ ...Having now come to the bottom, we begin to drive a tunnel about four or five feet in height and width, throwing all the dirt we dig out at the mouth of the hole as useless, with the exception of a few inches of stuff taken off the bottom, which we wash. We tunnel on in this way till we can go no farther, owing to meeting with other men’s tunnels. The ground having been then all wrought, we wash all our stuff and find another hole.’

300

Who discovered gold?

Edward Hargraves

300

How was the landscape destroyed?

Mine shafts were dug, trees were cut down to make space, pollution from poor sanitation and excess rubble from the mining was left over.

400

When did the news of the Australian Gold Rush reach China?

1853

400

What is a stockade?

1. A defensive barrier made of strong posts or timbers driven upright side by side into the ground. 2. a. A similar fenced or enclosed area, especially one used for protection. b. A jail on a military base.

400

What is puddling?

‘It was at Forest Creek that the **** system was first carried into effect, by means of which the auriferous soil is cleansed in a rude, simple, but wholesale way...The machine, when it is possible, is erected on a site commanded by a stream or reservoir of water, and admitting of an inclination sufficient to carry off the sludge. The operation is performed by shovelling in the dirt and admitting a supply of water, the action of the harrow breaking the lumps and mashing all into a thick fluid compound, when the gold is disintegrated, and by its superior gravity falls to the bottom.’

400

Where was gold discovered?

1851, Ophir, Bathurst.

400

How were the diggers treated by the troops?

Poorly.

500

When was the Chinese Immigration Act passed?

November 1861

500

What did the blue background of the Eureka Stockade Flag represent?

Blue shirts worn by many of the diggers.

500

What is tin washing?

‘The operation which procured Brown and me the three guineas’ worth of gold is technically called ****, and is very simply performed. The pan itself is generally about eighteen inches or more across the top, and three or four inches deep, with sloping sides. Into this vessel, the earth - which is technically called dirt - is thrown, when it is held by both hands in a slanting direction, and immersed in the water several times, in order that the looser and lighter particles of sand may be carried off by it. The pan is all the while kept agitated from side to side, to cause the gold to separate, and sink to the bottom, where, if there is any, it is soon found.’

500

Who accompanied Edward Hargraves in the discovery of Gold?

Tom and Lister.

500

Who did the gold belong to?

The Crown.

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