Carib Gold Mine, Burtville Goldfield, Laverton Shire, Western Australia, Australia
Latitude & Longitude (WGS84): | 28° 49' 37'' South , 122° 39' 33'' East |
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Latitude & Longitude (decimal): | -28.82697,122.65919 |
GeoHash: | G#: qdzhp0jww |
Locality type: | Mine |
Köppen climate type: | BWh : Hot deserts climate |
The Carib Gold Mine is 5 kilometres south south-east of Burtville, and 1 to 2 kilometres north-east of the modern Mikado workings and gold plant. Its exact location could not be pinpointed on the ground, occupies an isolated position, and the workings at best are a small group of shafts which there are several in the area.
All we get as a geology description is decomposed quartz, ironstone and a whole range of other 'substances' forming a rubbly mixture. The first people found at the mine was 1900 as Jaegar and Schmitzer (surnames). The following year it is owned by Howard or Hayward (depending on the source) from the Linden goldfield.
During this period, the Merry Pilgrim lease adjoining to the north-east is amalgamated into the Carib. There was also a Carib No 1 lease to the south worked by a Kalgoorlie syndicate.
After the initial prospectors and miners left in 1903, the mine was a tale of woe. Charles Wingfield Scott, better known as Dixie Scott, was a former lawyer, who determined during the gold rush days there was more money and gullible people in mining. This is the man who gives lawyers a bad name. One judge during a court case involving Dixie described him as such:
'He stands self convicted as a man totally devoid of the slightest claim to moral rectitude or common honesty. He has no compunction or hesitation whatsoever in -to put it mildly- misrepresenting facts to and misleading anyone who might be misguided or unfortunate enough to put any trust or confidence in him'.
John Brennan in 1903 owned the Carib Mine. Considering Scott's reputation was well known at Burtville, where everyone knew everyone else, it is remarkable he approached Scott to produce a report on the mine, and try to obtain a buyer. After eighteen months, Brennan gave up on Scott, and employed William Raynor (one time engineer at Baley's Reward Coolgardie)to go to London to float the mine. French speculators formed the Leviathan Gold Mining Company with 50 000 pounds capital.
Meanwhile James G. Thomas of the Sons of Westralia battery, a man who has been described as easily drawn into a fight (of the fists and blood type) claimed Scott and Brennan had authorised him to produce a report on the mine for a fee to be taken out of the sale proceeds. Thomas never obtained the money claiming both Scott and Brennan directed him to the other for the money. The judge determined both Scott and Thomas' evidence was unreliable, and were in cahoots to get money out of Brennan. His comments about both of them as individuals was damming.
Two years later, Scott takes the Union Bank Burtville Branch Bank Manager, William George Cheetham to court, again relating to the sale of the mine. Scott alleged Cheetham demanded a quarter share of the mine, otherwise he would scuttle the sale of the mine to the French speculators. How this could be achieved by a bank manager at the edge of the world was not determined. Scott stated he was blackmailed into convincing John Brennan (owner of the mine) to sign over the money. Then Scott decided to take the matter to court. Constantly in researching Burtville, Dixie Scott, crops up with some scheme to swindle others out of money. It was a wonder he was not run out of town.
The Leviathan enterprise did not last long, possibly in part due to the following episode. The syndicate had employed a fine mine manager,
Bob McCracken who had years of experience, notably as mine manager at the Lady Loch Gold Mine at Coolgardie. Late March 1908, he wandered into the scrub, carved his initials into a tree, then blew himself up with dynamite.
Little mining was done, the company retaining the lease through several requests for exemptions. Some shafts were unwatered. Then the mine closed through a lack of capital, and in short because the mine held little gold, the reef small and not very rich. The miners left with unpaid wages. They took the matter to court, which was decided in their favour, but they never saw the money.
Commodity List
This is a list of exploitable or exploited mineral commodities recorded at this locality.Mineral List
2 valid minerals.
Rock Types Recorded
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Alphabetical List Tree DiagramRegional Geology
This geological map and associated information on rock units at or nearby to the coordinates given for this locality is based on relatively small scale geological maps provided by various national Geological Surveys. This does not necessarily represent the complete geology at this locality but it gives a background for the region in which it is found.
Click on geological units on the map for more information. Click here to view full-screen map on Macrostrat.org
Quaternary 0 - 2.588 Ma ID: 704381 | colluvium 38491 Age: Pleistocene (0 - 2.588 Ma) Description: Colluvium and/or residual deposits, sheetwash, talus, scree; boulder, gravel, sand; may include minor alluvial or sand plain deposits, local calcrete and reworked laterite Comments: regolith; synthesis of multiple published descriptions Lithology: Regolith Reference: Raymond, O.L., Liu, S., Gallagher, R., Zhang, W., Highet, L.M. Surface Geology of Australia 1:1 million scale dataset 2012 edition. Commonwealth of Australia (Geoscience Australia). [5] |
Neoarchean - Mesoarchean 2500 - 3200 Ma ID: 3188963 | Archean intrusive rocks Age: Archean (2500 - 3200 Ma) Comments: Yilgarn Craton Lithology: Intrusive igneous rocks Reference: Chorlton, L.B. Generalized geology of the world: bedrock domains and major faults in GIS format: a small-scale world geology map with an extended geological attribute database. doi: 10.4095/223767. Geological Survey of Canada, Open File 5529. [154] |
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