![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
Cryptocurrency News Articles
Clogau St David's mine reopens, targeting gold deposits that have supplied the British royal family with wedding bands for generations
Mar 26, 2025 at 07:09 pm
The workspace would not suit everyone. A soggy, gritty, cramped cavern 50 metres beneath a Welsh hillside accessible only by a series of ladders that drop through craggy holes into the darkness.
The workspace would not suit everyone. A soggy, gritty, cramped cavern 50 metres beneath a Welsh hillside accessible only by a series of ladders that drop through craggy holes into the darkness.
But a smile spread over Dai Jones’s grime-caked face as the miner described the challenge of hunting for gold in the hills of north-west Wales and the joy when he and his colleagues find a few specks.
“It’s hard work, it’s not a place for the weak.” he said. “But when you see a bit of gold, it’s special. It makes you keep going back. I love the history; I like thinking about all the miners that have been here over the years. There’s hardly a family around here that doesn’t have a connection with the mine.”
This is a big moment in the history of the Clogau St David’s mine near Dolgellau in Gwynedd. Clogau used to be the UK’s richest goldmine, with members of the British royal family using the precious metal from the hills of Eryri (Snowdonia) in wedding bands for more than a century.
By the 1990s Clogau was considered exhausted, but in 2018 a company called Alba Mineral Resources acquired a licence and embarked on a programme of rehabilitation and exploration, deploying modern technology to try to track seams of gold.
It has now revealed that gold has been extracted from Clogau once again and this weekend an auction for a 1oz (28g) coin made from its gold to celebrate the revival of the site – and to test the keenness of the market for the metal – will begin.
“It’s an important moment for us,” said Mark Austin, the chief operating officer and senior geologist. “It’s been quite the journey.”
Gold hunting in these hills is not something to rush. Over the last five years the team has painstakingly drained flooded tunnels, removed hills of spoil left by their predecessors, often by hand, and made the parts of the network they need to access secure enough to satisfy modern safety regulations.
They had to show Natural Resources Wales and the Eryri national park that the water extracted from the mine would not harm the river that tumbles down the hillside and make sure they did not disturb the bats living in the old mine.
Austin said they had found gold in spoil heaps, left by the miners who worked here from 1854, and that they had pinpointed what they believed to be untapped reserve after drilling into the hillside.
The zone they are focusing on has been named the Llecfraith payshoot, which has the geological make-up associated with Welsh gold.
What they are looking for in particular are quartz veins with a “stripey and dirty” texture. A motto of the old-timers was: “Mine the streaky bacon, not the white elephant.” “There’s definitely gold there,” said Austin. The question is how much and how accessible is it.
The Guardian was taken down to “level five”, where blasting and digging is taking place. There is no easy way in and it is not comfortable: anyone entering has to wear a harness in case they slip from one of the ladders, and manoeuvring through the cracks and low tunnels is a challenge. It isn’t quiet; the constant drip of water echoes around the confined spaces.
Jones was working the vein at the payshoot, extracting ore that had previously been blasted from the rock face, loading it into a bag 0.7 tonne at a time. It is then hauled to surface ground level, transferred to a small wagon and rolled out along an old railway track into the fresh air.
There in a small plant, the ore is crushed and hammered and poured on to shaking tables. The flecks of gold, because they are heavier, separate and are sent on to a refinery.
In the office, George Frangeskides, Alba’s chair, described the economics of the operation. He said this was not (yet) a fully fledged mining operation but “bulk sampling”. “It’s a pilot plant, a boutique mine,” added Frangeskides.
When the mine last closed, gold was valued at less than a couple of hundred pounds per ounce; now it is more than £2,300. Sometimes Welsh gold, because of its rarity and its royal associations, can fetch five, 10 or 20 times the spot price.
The coin that is being auctioned, which features an image of a dragon atop the nearby mountain of Cadair Idris on one side and miners from the site’s golden age on the other, has a guide price of £20,000 to £25,000.
A maximum of 10 or 12 people work at the site, including veterans of previous mining in the Dolgellau gold belt,
Disclaimer:info@kdj.com
The information provided is not trading advice. kdj.com does not assume any responsibility for any investments made based on the information provided in this article. Cryptocurrencies are highly volatile and it is highly recommended that you invest with caution after thorough research!
If you believe that the content used on this website infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately (info@kdj.com) and we will delete it promptly.
-
- Arbitrum Launches Converge, a New Blockchain Designed to Serve as a Settlement Layer for Tokenized Real-World Assets (RWAs)
- Apr 18, 2025 at 08:40 am
- Ethereum Layer-2 protocol Arbitrum has launched Converge, a new blockchain designed to serve as a settlement layer for tokenized real-world assets (RWAs) and
-
-
-
- Crypto’s university grooming rumors echo China’s ‘naked loan’ scandal
- Apr 18, 2025 at 08:35 am
- Major cryptocurrency exchanges are under fire over allegations that they gave leveraged platform-locked funds to university students in China to encourage speculative trading. The controversy has drawn comparisons to the country’s campus lending scandal nearly a decade ago, when students burdened with debt were offered exploitative “naked loans” in exchange for nude pictures as collateral.
-
-
- Retail and Short-Term Holders Are Dumping Bitcoin, Whales Are Quiet
- Apr 18, 2025 at 08:30 am
- According to new on-chain data, most of the recent Bitcoin sell pressure has come from short-term holders and smaller wallets. In contrast, whales and long-term holders have reduced their activity despite market fluctuations.
-
-
-