Both in Australia and California, besides the superficial placer deposits situated in or near the existing rivers, which in the deep canons of the Klamath and other rivers in the extreme north of California attain a thickness of 250 feet, there exist auriferous gravels which bear no apparent relation to the present drainage of the country. These gravels often attain enormous thicknesses, and are in many places covered by volcanic rocks, consisting of basaltic lavas and tuffs, which are sometimes interbedded with gravel and loam. This latter circumstance shows that intermittent action of the volcanic vents, with long intervals of repose, has taken place. There has been some difficulty in accounting for the origin of these deep placers, and it has been ascribed in succession to the agency of the sea, of ice, and (for California) of a huge river flowing from north to south at right angles to the direction of flow of the existing rivers. None of these views are now entertained, and the “ fluviatile ” theory is generally accepted, the origin of the gravel being ascribed to the depositions of ancient rivers flowing in courses roughly parallel to those of existing rivers. The geological age of these ancient rivers has not yet been determined with certainty, but though they may be Pleistocene, the balance of palaeontological evidence is perhaps in favour of Whitney’s view that the deposits were formed in the Pliocene period.
The ancient Californian rivers probably had their sources at somewhat higher altitudes than those now existing, and had more uniform general grades, the slope of their beds corresponding more nearly to the general slope of the country. The existing rivers, on the other hand, have steep grades in the upper parts of their courses, followed by comparatively level stretches below. The old rivers, however, like their successors, had rapids, falls, and level stretches, the grade varying from 5 feet to 250 feet or more per mile. The Pliocene rivers ran in valleys which were broad and shallow in comparison with the present deep precipitous canons, and the volume of water was in general much greater than that delivered by their representatives of to-day. The width of the valleys varied from 100 feet to fully 1½ miles (which is the width at Columbia Hill), and the depth must have been often over 1,000 feet. These valleys were already partly filled up by accumulations of gravel, when the outbreak of volcanic activity in many cases filled up the remainder, and the streams were deflected into other channels, which often lie close alongside the old canons. These new channels, have been excavated by the running water until they now lie much below the level of the beds of the Pliocene rivers, and consequently the gravels which were deposited in the old valleys now sometimes crown the highest ground in the district, the general level of the country having been greatly reduced in height.
The new channels have been cut partly in the old country rock and partly in the Pliocene auriferous gravels and their covering of volcanic rocks. Sometimes the course of the present canons cuts that of the old at several points owing to the sinuosity of both, see Fig. 15, in which A represents the modern river, and B the ancient one. The result is that sections of the old valley from bed-rock to surface are exposed in the sides of the canons, usually at some height above the present level of the water, and it was at such points as these that the discovery of the existence of the deep placers was first made. The hard covering of basalt has served to protect the more friable gravels, which have been for the most part removed in those places where the lava has been worn away or has never existed, so that the largest tracks of gravels still existent lie beneath the volcanic rocks.
Fig. 16 represents a section across two ancient channels (B, B) and a modern canon, that of the American river. Here, A is the volcanic capping, which is 800 feet thick above the Red Point channel; B, B are the auriferous gravel channels; C, C are deposits of gravel on the “ rims,” containing gold in places ; D is the bed-rock, consisting of dark-blue slates ; E is a barren deposit of angular debris and boulders; F F are prospecting tunnels, which were put in at too high an altitude; F’ is the tunnel bored with the object of reaching the bottom of the gravel deposit ; H are prospecting winzes sunk in order to discover the position of the gravel. The space included within the dotted lines N M Y M’ N’ has been obviously denuded since the deposition of the volcanic cappings, the soft slate rims N M R and N’ M’ having been worn away, while the hard lava has resisted erosion. The vertical depth from M to the American river is about 1,800 or 2,000 feet.
This condition of things is that prevailing in California, but in Victoria the structure closely resembles that just described, with the exceptions that the old valleys were smaller and that the erosive action of the rivers since the deposition of the basalt has been comparatively slight, owing to the slight grades of the streams caused by the low elevation of the country and to the small amount of the rainfall. In consequence of this the basalt has usually not been worn through, and the “ deep leads ” or old river bottoms are often below the level of the present streams, so that although a larger proportion of the Pliocene gravel remains, it is more difficult and expensive to mine.
The shallow placers, at any rate in California, have resulted in the main from the erosion of these deep placers, the materials of which, having undergone a natural concentration in the ground sluices afforded by the river beds, furnished the wonderfully rich river-bed and bar deposits, which yielded so much gold between 1848 and 1860. The deep level gravels consist in slaty districts chiefly of quartzose sand, the fine materials furnished by the disintegration of the slate having been for the most part swept away, and the products of the quartz veins contained in the slate being left. These are the only gravels which pay for treatment. In granite districts, where the gravels are composed of more heterogeneous materials, and in cases where they consist of volcanic boulders and detritus, little or no gold is found. The lower parts of the gravels are often cemented into a conglomerate, called “cement,” by infiltration of silica, oxides or sulphides of iron, or, rarely, carbonate of lime; when the gravels are covered with lava, the whole thickness is in some cases converted into cement.
Where is the Gold in the Gravel
The gold is found chiefly either in contact with or just above bed-rock. If this consists of soft slate, and especially if the planes of cleavage are at a high angle to the horizon, particles of gold are often found in the natural riffles thus formed, and are disseminated through the rock to the depth of a foot or two. If depressions, pot-holes, or fissures exist in the old river bottom, they are usually very rich in gold. Where, as often happens, there is a channel, or “gutter,” to adopt the Australian expression, cut by the stream in the lowest part of the valley, the gravel filling it is usually much richer than that found elsewhere. Such rich portions, often only a few feet wide, and of insignificant depth, but extending to considerable distances in the direction of the stream, are called “leads.” Rich streaks also occur at various levels in the gravels, often resting on “ false-bottoms,” which consist of impermeable beds of clay or some similar material. Sometimes these streaks are richer than those encountered at bed-rock, as, for example, at the Paragon Mine, Placer County, California.
The amount and position of the gold vary, as in the case of the present rivers, with the grade, the shape of the valley, the volume of water, the amount of gravel being carried down. “An underloaded current—i.e., a current charged with less detritus than it is well able to carry—is apt to cut its bed, and prevent the accumulation of gravel. A greatly overloaded current will deposit too rapidly to admit of the concentration of the gold dust.” Under conditions intermediate between these extreme states, the current may be just strong enough to keep its bed clear from all accumulations except a small quantity of coarse gravel and the coarse gold, which is caught in the natural riffles, and thus all the conditions necessary to form a rich bed of pay-dirt may be present. If, however, the bed consist of granite or other rock which wears in smooth and rounded shapes, little gold will be caught. Slates, consisting of layers of uneven hardness, wear irregularly, and afford a good gold catching surface. The conditions noted above as necessary to form rich gravels cannot be expected to have been prevalent over great distances. “An increase of grade or narrowing of the channel will cause an increase of velocity, and the same stream may be underloaded in a narrow steep section, and overloaded in a broad flat section.” The difference of velocity between the middle and sides of a stream, and between the inside and outside of a bend, may give the right conditions in one part of a river bed and not in another. Thus with high grades, rich gravels should occur in the less rapid, and with low grades, in the more rapid parts of a stream. Having regard to such considerations, the richer parts of existing rivers can be pointed out with little trouble. When, as in the Pliocene rivers, the beds are buried to a depth of hundreds of feet, the richer parts are more difficult to find.
The history of the Pliocene rivers began with a period when excavation exceeded deposition, when the rivers were underloaded for at least a portion of each year, and the channel was constantly being deepened. Some bench or terrace gravels were formed at this time, and being at the sides of an underloaded river tended to be rich. The river bed, although rocky and comparatively free from sand, would perhaps accumulate some coarse gold, which as the channel deepened was no doubt in part ground up into fine particles and carried off, but at the time when the excavation had reached its lowest point, some of this coarse gold would certainly be present. When the underloading of the stream ceased, whatever caused the cessation, a pause must in many cases have occurred before the gravel proved too much for the stream to carry. During this pause the conditions for gold catching were favourable, and hence rich gravels were formed on bedrock in the gutters or channels. Then, as the streams became overloaded, sand and gravel accumulated rapidly, so that little concentration of the gold in them could take place. The rivers flowed over thick sand banks and, in consequence, frequently changed their courses. The sands, being deposited by overloaded rivers, of course contained fewer and smaller boulders, and the thick masses of poor sand thus went on accumulating until the volcanic outbursts put an end to the process.