After the Gold Rush by Warren Pole. The Mail on Sunday Live. January 8, 2012. 16-21 illus.
Photo of a mine at Tydrum, 800 feet underground. Although not stated this is the Cononish Gold Mine NGR NN 292 287.
“Scotgold CEO Chris Songster unlocks the heavy grille [open when I was there a few years ago] and we step inside, flicking on the small lights on our helmets to illuminate the blackness. Within a few yards, the light from the entrance has evaporated and we are enveloped by the cool darkness of the mine. We trudge almost half a mile down a tunnel, ankle-deep in water, until the shaft begins tracking a vein of gold. There is now 800ft of rock above us and tiny particles of fool's gold, or iron pyrite, glint in the walls of the tunnel. 'Most of the gold particles in here are less than 0.lmm in diameter, says Sangster, so you can't see them with the naked eye.
First discovered in 1985, the Tyndrum mine was shelved when the price of gold plummeted early this century, but with its value now soaring, Scotgold plans to start mining later this year. The company's discreet offices, located within former railway station buildings, give no hint of the potential fortune the company is sit¬ting on. 'There are actually highly prospective areas here,' Sangster insists. 'The official resource we have is 163,000 ounces, which is £184 million at today's prices.'
By this time next year, those 163,000 ounces will almost certainly be worth considerably more. Since 2008, gold's price has doubled, now standing at more than £1,040 an ounce. As the value of traditional investment markets, ranging from the stock exchange to property, has nosedived, and global financial markets have slid deeper into turmoil, momentum has built for what is now being described as 'the new gold rush'. Those caught up in it include everyone from high financiers to petty street criminals.”
Other photos include: Gold bullion in the Bank of England vaults; A gold ingot from Russia worth £430K; Leon Kirk attempts to find gold using a simple device made from a pipe and a tennis ball; The Golden Globe – total gold production for 2010 [world wide].
Cutting coal in my spare time.