NZ SECTOR/West Coast/Ross Goldfields

Ross Goldfields INTEL

Ross was one of New Zealand's richest alluvial goldfields, famous for producing the country's largest nugget — the 99-ounce "Honourable Roddy" discovered in 1909. The nugget was gifted to King George V for his coronation, though it was later melted down to make a tea service. Today, Jones Creek offers the best fossicking access.

Target GPS
-42.894, 170.817
Tenure Status
VERIFIED PUBLIC
Initialising Tactical Map...
GPS Lock: Ross

Mission Profile

Discovery Metrics

Yield ProbabilityHigh (Alluvial)
Extraction difficulty
Best Deployment

Operational Gear

Stratigraphy & History

Gold was discovered in Ross in 1864-65, initially in surface gravels before extensive underground mining began. The town's wealth attracted investment in elaborate water races and tunnel systems. A replica of the Honourable Roddy is displayed at the Ross Goldfields Heritage Centre, alongside artefacts from the mining era.

Geological Context

The alluvial gold at Ross derived from rich quartz veins in the surrounding hills. Both coarse nuggets and fine gold are found, depending on location. The old tailings piles still hold gold that the primitive technology missed — they're worth sampling with modern pans.

Field Note

Sample the old tailings piles along Jones Creek. Miners missed fine gold that modern pans catch.

CONFIDENTIAL PRO-INTEL

Verified Sector Secret

"The "Old Cemetery" gully off Jones Creek track. Old-timers didn't dig there out of respect — but the gold doesn't know that."

Economic Potential

Historical yield data suggests unrecovered fines at depth. Optimal for small-scale suction or high-banking if permitted.

Recovery Probability72%
Protocol v4

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