Marble Bar is officially the hottest town in Australia. The Geology here is ancient—some of the oldest crust on the planet. The gold is coarse, nuggety, and often sitting right on the surface.

Do not prospect here in summer (Nov-March). Temperatures regularly exceed 45°C (113°F). People die here from dehydration and heat stroke every year.
Remote Access: Carry a PLB (Personal Locator Beacon) and extra water. There is no cell service. You are on your own.
Known for its conglomerates (pudding stone). The gold was trapped in ancient river beds that are now hard rock hills. Detect the slopes.
Apart from the heat, it hosts the "Iron Clad" hotel and vast mineral fields. Jasper and other gemstones are also abundant here.
Pilbara gold is often flat and smooth, affectionately called "watermelon seeds." They give a loud, sharp signal on a detector.
Look for the **Beaton's Creek Formation** (conglomerate). As these hills erode, they release the gold trapped in the ancient gravels. Detect the gullies directly below the conglomerate cap-rock.
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