The first traditional gold rush occurred in the year 1700. The discovery of gold deposits in the rivers of Brazil unleashed torrents of adventurers from the entire colony, and even some from the Portuguese homeland, into the country’s interior. By 1720, Brazil had become the world’s largest gold producer, delivering over 15 tons—and providing almost two-thirds of global production. The gold rush in South America’s largest country already bore all the characteristics of later movements the world over, but it took almost another 130 years before the next real gold rush happened.
Vast gold reserves were discovered in California in 1848. The wave of prospectors that flooded westward never slackened, and within a short time the United States had catapulted to the top of the gold-producing nations. But it wasn’t Brazil, which had long ago led the league, that was nudged out of the top spot: it was the Czar’s Russia. Huge reserves had been discovered in the Urals during the mid-18th century, making Yekaterinenburg the center of Russian gold production.
However, California did not pose the only serious competition for first place to czarist Russia. An Australian gold prospector was returning home from California in late 1850. While onboard ship, he bet that he would only need a week to find geological formations in Australia similar to those he knew from California—and discover gold deposits. And indeed, Edward Hargraves was right. Upon his return to the fifth continent, it took him only one week to discover gold in the Macquarie River in New South Wales. Thus, the Australian gold rush began a mere two years after California’s. Hargraves was later richly rewarded for his service: Queen Victoria appointed him Commissioner of the lands where he had discovered gold, making him financially secure for life. These finds were crucially decisive for both the English mother country and the market in London. While most American gold remained in the country, the Australian gold found its way to Europe and secured London's position as the global center for gold trading.
The last gold rush in the traditional sense of the word came in 1896, when two Canadian prospectors discovered deposits near the Yukon River. Not only did the Klondike reserves enter the world of literature, these fields were the gold seekers’ most coveted of all. Of the 100,000 people who set out for Dawson City, the mining town at the center of the reserves, only 30,000 to 40,000 actually arrived. Of those, only about 5,000 actually prospected for gold, and only a few hundred truly got rich. All in all, the Klondike Gold Rush lasted a total of three years. Seventy-five tons of gold were extracted from the rivers and earth during this time, and then the population of Dawson City—Canada's largest city north of Winnipeg for two years—collapsed. Although gold was mined in this region until 1966, its glory days had long been over.
Ten years after the gold rush in northern Canada, gold was discovered in an entirely different location on the globe: South Africa. Here, however, traditional “diggers” and seekers of fortune did not dominate the scene from the start. Instead, well-capitalized companies with a high level of technical expertise tackled the task professionally. Gold had already been discovered in a few locations throughout South Africa during the first half of the 19th century, but it was always overshadowed by huge diamond finds in Kimberly in the Cape Province. But everything changed in 1886, when gold reserves were discovered near Johannesburg in the Orange Free State, a former Boer republic—reserves that still yield large annual volumes to this day.
The companies that had established hegemony over the diamond reserves rushed to seize control of these as well. But in the beginning they were faced with problems that seemed unsolvable. Why? Because the deposits in South Africa are different from those found in other parts of the world. There are no gold nuggets to dig for; not even visible traces of gold. The deposits at Witwatersrand are not found in mineral veins or lodes: They are gold placer deposits, with the gold hosted by conglomerates and grits. And this made it very difficult to recover. English scientists finally saved the day by developing a technical process for dissolving gold from ore, helping the gold mining industry on the Cape of Good Hope rise from near failure in 1890 to successfully defending its position at the top in 2007. In 1887, South Africa produced 1.2 tons of gold, which amounted to 0.8% of global production. Five years later it was already 30 tons, a number that grew steadily up into the 1970s, peaking at over 1,000 tons annually. Only then did a combination of high costs and major technical difficulties involved in establishing new mines, along with decreasing gold content in the placer deposits cause companies to slowly scale back production. Almost 40 years after setting a production record in 1970, South Africa still produces approximately 260 tons a year. In a little more than a century, a total of approximately 60,000 tons of gold have left that country—almost half of all the gold mined anywhere on the planet over the last 6,000 years.
But despite the discoveries described above, gold is not actually a commonly occurring element. To this day, a total of approximately 160,000 tons of the precious metal have been wrested from the earth’s grasp. Although that sounds like a large amount at first, if it were all compressed into a cube it would only be slightly larger than the passage through the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin.