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  2. La Paz, Arizona - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Paz,_Arizona

    La Paz grew in the spring of 1862 along the Colorado River to serve the miners washing placer gold in the La Paz Mining District. This district produced about 50,000 troy ounces of gold per year in 1863 and 1864. [5] La Paz had a population of 1,500 and was a stage stop between Fort Whipple, Arizona and San Bernardino, California. [6]

  3. Gila City, Arizona - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gila_City,_Arizona

    Gila City was founded on the south bank of the Gila River, 19 miles east of the confluence of the Gila and Colorado rivers.Also known as Ligurta, [1] the town was established as a result of Arizona's first major gold rush, when Colonel Jacob Snively led a party of prospectors to a placer deposit along the Gila River in and around Monitor Gulch, which emerges from the Gila Mountains to the south.

  4. Placer deposit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Placer_deposit

    Placer mining is an important source of gold, and was the main technique used in the early years of many gold rushes, including the California Gold Rush. Types of placer deposits include alluvium, eluvium, beach placers, aeolian placers and paleo-placers. [2] Placer materials must be both dense and resistant to weathering processes. To ...

  5. Weaver, Arizona - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weaver,_Arizona

    The town of Weaverville was established shortly after the discovery of placer gold deposits on nearby Rich Hill in May 1863. The town was named after mountain man Pauline Weaver, who worked as a guide for the group of prospectors who made the discovery. The gold was discovered by a member of the party while chasing a stray donkey. [2]

  6. Placer mining - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Placer_mining

    Plate depicting placer mining from the 1556 book De re metallica. Placers supplied most of the gold for a large part of the ancient world. Hydraulic mining methods such as hushing were used widely by the Romans across their empire, but especially in the gold fields of northern Spain after its conquest by Augustus in 25 BC.

  7. ‘Border czar’ Kamala Harris panned for wearing reported $62K ...

    www.aol.com/border-czar-kamala-harris-panned...

    AFP via Getty Images Harris, 59, was wearing dark sunglasses, a brown jacket over a black top and dark colored pants, and sporting what critics claimed was a $62,000 necklace from Tiffany’s.

  8. Cleator, Arizona - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cleator,_Arizona

    James Cleator was a Manx who had run away to sea as a boy, arriving in America with Spanish sailors in 1889 and walking his way to gold mines in California before traveling through Mexico to Arizona by 1900. He approached Nellis in 1905 and the pair became business partners, running the town and opening a ranch together; in 1915 they split ...

  9. Steamboats of the Colorado River - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steamboats_of_the_Colorado...

    A few months later gold was found at what became the placer mining camp of Murphyville, on the Arizona side of the river just 12 miles (19 km) below Eldorado Canyon. Also in 1892, another gold boom occurred 20 miles (32 km) east of Eldorado Canyon at White Hills in the White Hills , in Arizona Territory.