The Palmer was the scene of Australia's wildest gold rush. A place of immense riches, "Cannibal" folklore, and rugged tropical wilderness. The gold is still there, but getting to it is the challenge.

The Palmer River is inhabited by **Saltwater Crocodiles**. They are apex predators and inhabit freshwater far inland. Stay away from deep water edges.
Access Warning: The road to Maytown is 4WD only and often impassable in the wet season. This is remote country.
The capital of the Palmer field. Now just stone kerbing and ruins in the bush. Camping is permitted at designated areas (check QPWS bookings).
The river is wide and rocky. High-grade gold is found in the slate crevices. Because of the crocs, stick to the high dry bars or shallow riffles where you have visibility.
Thousands of Chinese miners worked this field. You will find Chinese coins and artifacts. Leave them in place—they are protected heritage.
The bedrock here is often vertical **slate**. The gold gets trapped deep in the "book leaves" of the slate. Use large screwdrivers and pry bars to open up the slate layers in the dry river bed. The gold is chunky and high purity.
Strategic weight valuation. Calculate the spot yield of your discovery and bridge the target gap to a physical ounce.
"The gap to a full ounce is only 30.10 grams..."
Optional gold-culture references for readers curious about bars, coins, purity and storage language after prospecting. These are third-party resources, not financial advice.
Third-party resource for learning how vaulted physical gold services describe storage, fees and custody.
Useful for comparing bars, coins, premiums and purity language after learning field testing basics.
Browse mainstream bullion product formats and premiums as gold-culture background, not prospecting advice.
Reference catalogue for seeing common retail names, weights and purity markings used on coins and bars.
Land access rights, safety conditions, and public fossicking zones change. You are solely responsible for verifying regulations with local authorities (DOC/Council/BLM) and assessing river safety before visiting. Paystreak.io accepts no liability for injury, fines, or trespassing. Never dig on private land without explicit permission.
✓ Information last verified: January 2026