"Gold Rush" Paydirt Playbook: Gold Rush Special
ID | 13211144 |
---|---|
Movie Name | "Gold Rush" Paydirt Playbook: Gold Rush Special |
Release Name | Gold.Rush.S11E50.Paydirt.Playbook.480p.x264-mSD |
Year | 2020 |
Kind | tv |
Language | English |
IMDB ID | 37762637 |
Format | srt |
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It is show time!
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Narrator: On this "Gold Rush"...
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- Show me the money! - Show me the money!
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Narrator: ...Over 10 years, the miners have pulled in
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almost $70 million worth of gold.
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We broke the scale!
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Narrator: Along the way, some have struck out...
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Man #12: We're all gonna be broke.
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Todd: You are freaking kidding me!
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We're on the road to trouble actually.
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Narrator: While others...
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Scored massive paydays.
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We're washing rocks, baby!
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Every gold miner's looking for stuff like this.
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Look at all that good stuff.
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- Whoa.
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Narrator: Now we reveal the secrets to striking it rich.
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Shake your moneymaker right there.
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From prospecting...
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It's garbage, and it's good stuff.
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That's the bottom line.
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You're all millionaires. The only thing is you got to
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get it out of the ground.
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Narrator: ...To running massive machinery...
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Parker: Yeah, baby!
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...and gold-catching monsters,
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the definitive guide...
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Ohh-ooh!
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...to gold mining.
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- Can get used to that. Whoo!
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Watch Online Movies and Series for FREE
www.osdb.link/lm
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Money.
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Ooh-aah. There's gold.
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Narrator: For more than 6,500 years,
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humans have hunted and mined this rare and precious metal.
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That's a hell of a lot of gold.
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Narrator: In all that time,
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just 197,000 tons have been mined.
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This gold would only fill four Olympic swimming pools.
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Man #2: Look at that big guy.
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With an estimated 54,000 tons of gold
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still left in the ground,
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the race to find it and bank millions
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drives prospectors to the ends of the earth.
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It's gonna be a treasure hunt. I'm super excited.
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Narrator: Tracking down gold-rich ground
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is their first challenge.
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I think I found something!
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There's some gold right there.
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Every gold miner's dream is to hit a mother lode,
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the geological term for the source of gold.
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Finding one could mean billions.
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After mining for five years with mixed results,
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Todd Hoffman swings for the fences,
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taking his father, Jack,
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and son, hunter, on a treasure hunt
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up the Yukon's legendary Eldorado creek
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in search of the mother lode.
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Jack: Guys, this is it.
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The history of this creek, hunter, is that there's
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more gold here than any place else in the Yukon.
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Eldorado. It's got a lot of history. I'll tell you that.
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What are those?
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Those are stamp-mill parts right there.
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- A drill bit. - Yeah.
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Yeah, that's an old drill bit.
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Narrator: In August 1896,
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less than three miles down creek,
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prospectors found piles of gold nuggets.
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Since their discovery,
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miners have pulled out over 6 million ounces,
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making Eldorado one of the richest claims in the Klondike.
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And many believe there's a lot more to be found.
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The Hoffmans meet claim owner
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and expert geologist Peter Tallman.
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Look at that hat.
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We've been hearing about this creek
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since we were kids.
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How much gold do you think is really left up in this area?
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The second-largest nugget in the Klondike
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was recovered just right there.
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This particular rock is coming from bedrock
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with a chunk of gold in it.
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Are you freakin' kidding me?
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The fault is providing a source for what's in these creeks.
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Narrator: Gold is formed when stars explode.
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Four and a half billion years ago,
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the dust of dead stars combined to form the earth
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with gold at its core.
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When magma containing this gold
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is forced up through faults in the earth's crust,
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it cools and crystallizes into veins of quartz and gold
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known as a mother lode.
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Mining this is called hard-rock mining.
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But over time, streams erode the mother lode,
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carrying gold into the valleys below.
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The heavy gold then sinks through the mud
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and gathers on bedrock
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in the placer deposits the Hoffmans are looking for.
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There is gold here in the creeks,
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and it's still available to be mined.
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There's a million ounces in the rocks somewhere.
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There's been 20 million eroded out of the rocks,
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so somewhere there's got to be some of that left.
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It's one of the last areas on the planet
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where nobody's been able to find the bedrock source.
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This would be a treasure hunt of all treasure hunts.
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Jack: So this might be our future right here.
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Todd: Hey, you think we can come
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to some kind of a deal on this place?
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I'd be open to it. We'll work something out.
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Sounds like a deal, man. Thanks.
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Right on.
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Narrator: Todd spent six weeks and thousands of dollars
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in search of a monster pay day.
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Jack: I don't want just a little bit of gold. I want crazy gold.
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Narrator: But he never did find Eldorado's mother lode.
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How's it look?
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This is not what I expected.
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There is absolutely nothing here.
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Eldorado is dead.
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Narrator: Todd gambled everything on one spot and lost,
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but there is another way.
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Old-school digging! Like, real digging.
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Prospect on many different spots
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and test for gold before you dig...
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...by panning... Metal detecting...
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That's so crazy.
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...or reading the land with ground-penetrating radar
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and aerial mapping.
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Miners rely on the clues these techniques provide
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to find the best spot.
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Look how this valley opens up right there. Look right here.
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See where it just fans out right there?
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That should be an alluvial fan.
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I think our best gold is right here.
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Narrator: And for one man, there's only one way
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to identify a gold-rich pay streak.
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In 2013, 18-year-old Parker Schnabel
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decides to mine in the Yukon for the first time.
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As soon as he arrives, he gets a lesson in drilling
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from his new landlord, mining legend Tony beets.
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Sounds good to me.
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We're good to go!
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Narrator: Tony's plan... Drill a series of test holes
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through worthless overburden
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in search of a pay streak of gold-rich gravel
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that has settled on the bedrock.
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How many holes should I drill?
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They're looking for rounded gravel,
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which would indicate an ancient riverbed
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where gold would have gathered.
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How deep are we at right now?
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That's no good.
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I would much rather drill something and find out
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that there's no gold rather than just dig holes
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and guess where we're going.
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Normally, I would have stripped this whole thing
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and mined it and found nothing, right?
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So now we can move on and find gold elsewhere.
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Starting to look pretty different.
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Hopefully this thing is on some pay dirt right now.
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What does that sound like to you?
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How deep are we at right now?
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Right on.
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Yeah, baby!
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Sounds good to me.
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Right on.
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- Right there. - Look at that.
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A bunch of little flakes.
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Yeah. And I have been spending a lot of it.
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Narrator: Coming up, getting down to the gold
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on the richest cuts in "gold rush" history.
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- Oh, no way, man! - I don't think anybody
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would have guessed there was much gold in that ground.
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Narrator: On this "gold rush," we reveal the secrets
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to making millions mining for gold.
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Man #3: So, now that you've got my interest...
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Once you've found where the gold is...
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This is gold country. That's what this is.
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...you need to dig down to the gold-rich pay layer.
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Every gold miner's looking for stuff like this.
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We've got river rock, and then you got bedrock.
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Right where those two meet is where all the gold is.
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Narrator: But getting down to the rich pay layer
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is never as easy as it looks.
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It's no joke moving this amount of dirt.
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Narrator: "Gold rush's" most profitable cut?
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The last cut.
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Over three seasons, Parker pulled out more than
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10,000 ounces of Klondike gold,
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worth nearly $13 million.
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Parker: The last cut is the best ground that we've ever mined.
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Narrator: Rewind to 2017...
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...and all that gold
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was buried under millions of tons of dirt
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across an area twice the size of Ellis island.
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Parker: All right. Here's the first push.
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This cut that we're opening up, is, you know,
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the last piece of ground that I intend on mining for Tony.
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So we're calling it "the last cut."
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Narrator: To get to the pay layer 20 feet down,
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Parker breaks out a d10 dozer to strip the virgin ground...
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While his crew brings in excavators
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and a fleet of rock trucks
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to remove waste overburden from the cut.
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Man #4: Things are starting to shape up down here pretty good,
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though, eh?
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Yeah, man. It's looking good.
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Narrator: But six feet down...
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Hear that? That's the sound of me hitting frozen ground.
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...Parker's crew member, Brennan,
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has hit permafrost,
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ground that's been frozen solid for thousands of years.
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Hey, Rick, I got a little problem down here.
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You mind coming down, take a look?
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So, like, this whole area is pretty much frozen?
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Yeah. We can see the ice in it, so...
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Frost, man.
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Holy .
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You're just gonna have to scrape up what you can get.
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I'm gonna have to talk to Parker.
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Parker: I hate going into a cat when everything's frozen.
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This is a lesson on how not to mine.
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Your only two options are to let it thaw or to rip it.
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Narrator: Parker's plan... Use d10 dozers
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to break the permafrost into chunks to melt...
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Then strip away the thawed ground to expose the gravels
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where the gold is concentrated.
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Mitch: First thing I'm gonna do is throw a rip in it.
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We're gonna get some air down in it, get some sunlight on this,
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and hopefully it'll thaw out.
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Narrator: The d10's 7-ton steel ripper...
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There you go. You got it.
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...is engineered to tear through concrete.
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Mitch: We'll crush this ground together
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and get it done as quick as possible,
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and then the sun can take over and do what it's got to do.
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One step closer to paydirt. You betcha.
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Narrator: The deeper the crew dig through the layers of dirt,
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the further back in time they go.
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What is that?
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Yeah, I'm pretty sure it's a tusk.
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I've never dug one out before.
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Brennan's found a few small ones.
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Narrator: 12,000 years ago, during the last ice age,
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Parker's claim was an open plain filled with streams...
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The perfect habitat... Come on, baby.
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...for woolly mammoths.
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Oh, no way, man!
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That is definitely a tusk. That is unreal!
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Look at that thing.
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Can you imagine having this hanging off your face,
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walking around out here?
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You know, some people think that if you find a mammoth task,
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there's gonna be a lot of gold there.
257
00:15:24,250 --> 00:15:25,950
It's extremely dense, extremely heavy.
258
00:15:26,050 --> 00:15:27,320
You know, much like gold.
259
00:15:27,420 --> 00:15:29,860
So there is a chance that, you know,
260
00:15:29,960 --> 00:15:33,290
possibly some gold was washed in there at the same time.
261
00:15:35,860 --> 00:15:37,430
Narrator: 20 feet down,
262
00:15:37,530 --> 00:15:39,970
the crew's still not hit the prize...
263
00:15:40,070 --> 00:15:42,300
Gold-rich gravels.
264
00:15:45,370 --> 00:15:47,740
We're into the overburden, but nobody has any idea
265
00:15:47,840 --> 00:15:49,040
how deep it is.
266
00:15:49,140 --> 00:15:53,050
Could be 30 feet of overburden.
267
00:15:53,150 --> 00:15:55,450
We almost done? 'Cause I'm hungry.
268
00:15:55,550 --> 00:15:57,530
Another couple of minutes here. Let me flatten this off
269
00:15:57,550 --> 00:15:58,990
and back in here.
270
00:15:59,090 --> 00:16:01,120
We'll call it a day.
271
00:16:07,460 --> 00:16:09,700
Hold on.
272
00:16:09,800 --> 00:16:13,170
Just hold on. Ahh.
273
00:16:13,270 --> 00:16:16,440
You know, that kind of feels a bit different, though.
274
00:16:22,410 --> 00:16:24,610
Oh, yeah.
275
00:16:26,480 --> 00:16:30,380
You know, when we start to see bigger rocks like this...
276
00:16:30,480 --> 00:16:32,420
I think that's what we're looking for.
277
00:16:32,520 --> 00:16:35,890
And it's thawed, so I think we might be in business here.
278
00:16:35,990 --> 00:16:39,190
Narrator: The crew's worked around the clock for eight weeks
279
00:16:39,290 --> 00:16:41,330
to get to this point.
280
00:16:41,400 --> 00:16:45,430
It's time for Parker to do a test pan for gold.
281
00:16:45,530 --> 00:16:47,980
Parker: Yeah, I mean, a good pan should have at least 10 colors.
282
00:16:48,000 --> 00:16:50,300
So it's kind of what we're looking for.
283
00:17:04,050 --> 00:17:06,850
Come look at this.
284
00:17:06,950 --> 00:17:08,890
- . - That's one pan.
285
00:17:08,990 --> 00:17:11,360
What?!
286
00:17:11,460 --> 00:17:14,030
- Dude, look at that chunk. - 16 colors?
287
00:17:14,130 --> 00:17:17,000
No way. Dude, normally you can't pan a flake, either,
288
00:17:17,100 --> 00:17:19,500
and there's like 2,000 ounces in a catch, so...
289
00:17:19,600 --> 00:17:21,600
If you can get that, it must be really good.
290
00:17:21,700 --> 00:17:22,870
That's awesome.
291
00:17:22,970 --> 00:17:24,340
- And that's big stuff. - Yeah.
292
00:17:24,440 --> 00:17:26,510
The last cut may not be the last cut
293
00:17:26,610 --> 00:17:28,270
if it holds out like this.
294
00:17:28,380 --> 00:17:30,410
"Just joking. I'm back!"
295
00:17:32,110 --> 00:17:34,110
Narrator: After spending weeks
296
00:17:34,210 --> 00:17:37,020
and hundreds of thousands of dollars on fuel
297
00:17:37,120 --> 00:17:38,380
to get to pay...
298
00:17:38,490 --> 00:17:39,990
It is show time!
299
00:17:40,090 --> 00:17:44,020
...it's time to see how much gold the ground holds.
300
00:17:44,120 --> 00:17:45,990
Load her up with some dirt, Tyson.
301
00:17:46,090 --> 00:17:47,930
- Whoo!
302
00:17:48,030 --> 00:17:50,930
- Shaking his first rocks. - It looks good!
303
00:17:55,700 --> 00:18:00,440
Narrator: To score big in mining first means finding the gold.
304
00:18:00,540 --> 00:18:02,240
Can't be that complicated.
305
00:18:02,340 --> 00:18:04,810
Narrator: After hitting a gold-rich pay layer...
306
00:18:04,910 --> 00:18:06,750
Fire it up! Let's make some gold.
307
00:18:06,850 --> 00:18:09,620
Narrator: ...It's time to separate the precious metal
308
00:18:09,720 --> 00:18:11,780
from the worthless dirt.
309
00:18:11,890 --> 00:18:13,970
This is the big, beautiful bastard that's gonna catch
310
00:18:14,050 --> 00:18:16,060
all the gold for us this year.
311
00:18:16,160 --> 00:18:19,060
A gold wash plant has one goal,
312
00:18:19,160 --> 00:18:21,360
and that's to extract a little bit of gold
313
00:18:21,460 --> 00:18:24,800
out of hundreds, thousands, or tons of material.
314
00:18:24,900 --> 00:18:27,670
You need to get the material fed into it,
315
00:18:27,770 --> 00:18:30,000
it needs to wash the rocks,
316
00:18:30,100 --> 00:18:32,110
and it needs to recover the gold out them.
317
00:18:32,210 --> 00:18:35,040
Narrator: No piece of equipment is more important
318
00:18:35,140 --> 00:18:38,140
than a wash plant.
319
00:18:38,250 --> 00:18:41,580
Everything rides on it sifting out the tiny flakes
320
00:18:41,680 --> 00:18:45,650
of gold scattered among thousands of tons of dirt.
321
00:18:51,560 --> 00:18:56,600
Some miners use a rotating screened Trommel.
322
00:18:56,700 --> 00:19:02,030
Others use vibrating screens in a shaker deck.
323
00:19:02,140 --> 00:19:04,200
Shake your moneymaker right there.
324
00:19:04,300 --> 00:19:05,940
We're washing rocks, baby!
325
00:19:16,950 --> 00:19:18,680
Narrator: The most productive wash plant
326
00:19:18,790 --> 00:19:20,590
in "gold rush" history?
327
00:19:20,690 --> 00:19:24,220
Parker's custom-built $600,000 shaker
328
00:19:24,320 --> 00:19:25,990
that goes by one name.
329
00:19:26,090 --> 00:19:29,000
Parker: Sluicifer!
330
00:19:29,100 --> 00:19:31,160
There she is!
331
00:19:34,430 --> 00:19:37,300
Doesn't that just look sexy?
332
00:19:37,400 --> 00:19:39,070
Narrator: Parker's secret weapon
333
00:19:39,170 --> 00:19:42,410
can run 250 yards of dirt an hour
334
00:19:42,510 --> 00:19:46,080
and deliver $20,000 of gold a day.
335
00:19:46,180 --> 00:19:48,210
This is bitchin'.
336
00:19:50,220 --> 00:19:53,150
I like that it's nice and new. That's the best part.
337
00:19:53,250 --> 00:19:55,560
Man #5: It's gonna be a shame to run dirt through it.
338
00:20:01,330 --> 00:20:04,260
Narrator: Parker has already opened his cut
339
00:20:04,360 --> 00:20:09,070
and stockpiled a mountain of paydirt.
340
00:20:09,170 --> 00:20:14,010
Now he'll drag Sluicifer onto a berm 60 feet high,
341
00:20:14,110 --> 00:20:18,410
set up a conveyor to feed pay into the plant,
342
00:20:18,510 --> 00:20:22,220
and attach a water supply to wash the rocks,
343
00:20:22,320 --> 00:20:24,850
sending the waste tailings and muddy water
344
00:20:24,950 --> 00:20:28,320
out into a disused old cut.
345
00:20:31,460 --> 00:20:34,830
- Well, I guess this is it, huh? - Let's do it.
346
00:20:34,900 --> 00:20:37,200
Don't drop it!
347
00:20:37,300 --> 00:20:39,700
No problem.
348
00:20:39,800 --> 00:20:42,370
The monster wash plant Rick's maneuvering
349
00:20:42,470 --> 00:20:44,770
weighs 45 tons.
350
00:20:47,710 --> 00:20:49,980
Wheelie time.
351
00:20:52,050 --> 00:20:53,850
Whoo.
352
00:20:57,380 --> 00:21:00,620
Easy! Rick! Rick!
353
00:21:00,720 --> 00:21:02,190
Holy , bud.
354
00:21:02,290 --> 00:21:05,020
- What? - It's waving all over the place!
355
00:21:05,130 --> 00:21:06,830
Oh. Gotcha. Sorry.
356
00:21:06,930 --> 00:21:08,640
Parker: Rick's a little aggressive there, you know?
357
00:21:08,660 --> 00:21:10,170
And this is our first time moving the thing.
358
00:21:10,200 --> 00:21:13,370
You'd think he'd take it a little easy.
359
00:21:13,470 --> 00:21:15,530
Easy. Easy, easy, easy.
360
00:21:21,510 --> 00:21:22,710
It is show time!
361
00:21:22,810 --> 00:21:25,540
Hopefully, this thing runs as good as it looks!
362
00:21:25,650 --> 00:21:27,180
Well, here's the moment of truth.
363
00:21:27,280 --> 00:21:30,050
Fire it up! Go.
364
00:21:35,590 --> 00:21:39,860
Narrator: Sluicifer runs up to 3,300 gallons of water a minute.
365
00:21:39,960 --> 00:21:41,760
- You guys ready for some dirt? - Yeah.
366
00:21:41,830 --> 00:21:43,730
Load her up with some dirt, Tyson.
367
00:21:43,830 --> 00:21:45,330
Narrator: Down in the cut,
368
00:21:45,430 --> 00:21:48,200
the crew loads paydirt into a hopper.
369
00:21:48,300 --> 00:21:51,540
A conveyor takes the pay up to a prewash.
370
00:21:51,640 --> 00:21:53,440
Here, water jets blast
371
00:21:53,540 --> 00:21:57,680
the gold and fine material off the rocks.
372
00:21:57,780 --> 00:21:59,780
Inside the shaker,
373
00:21:59,880 --> 00:22:03,950
a series of screens separate out the waste rocks,
374
00:22:04,050 --> 00:22:06,620
allowing fine, gold-bearing material
375
00:22:06,720 --> 00:22:09,660
to flow down into the sluice boxes
376
00:22:09,760 --> 00:22:10,960
where the heavier gold
377
00:22:11,060 --> 00:22:15,130
settles between the ripples and into the mats.
378
00:22:15,230 --> 00:22:17,160
- Whoo!
379
00:22:17,260 --> 00:22:19,970
- Shaking his first rocks. - It looks good!
380
00:22:20,070 --> 00:22:23,570
Parker: This is the best wash plant that I've ever seen.
381
00:22:23,670 --> 00:22:26,840
And it's gonna find us a lot of gold.
382
00:22:26,910 --> 00:22:29,110
Narrator: To date, Sluicifer has captured
383
00:22:29,210 --> 00:22:34,910
nearly 14,500 ounces of gold, worth over $20 million.
384
00:22:35,020 --> 00:22:37,420
But even a wash plant as powerful and efficient
385
00:22:37,520 --> 00:22:41,820
as Sluicifer can only run with one key ingredient.
386
00:22:41,920 --> 00:22:44,590
Parker: We can't sluice without water.
387
00:22:44,690 --> 00:22:48,330
Narrator: Water is the lifeblood of a placer mine.
388
00:22:48,430 --> 00:22:51,130
From panning and monitoring...
389
00:22:51,230 --> 00:22:53,400
Parker: Water's the best way to thaw things out.
390
00:22:53,500 --> 00:22:54,800
That's full flow!
391
00:22:54,900 --> 00:22:56,600
Narrator: ...To a wash plant's prewash...
392
00:22:56,700 --> 00:22:58,070
Yeah, we got water, bud.
393
00:22:58,170 --> 00:23:00,070
Narrator: ...And sluices...
394
00:23:00,170 --> 00:23:02,310
- Whoa!
395
00:23:10,550 --> 00:23:13,720
What in the ? There's no water.
396
00:23:13,820 --> 00:23:16,090
...keeping water flowing to the plant...
397
00:23:16,190 --> 00:23:17,990
I ain't got no water!
398
00:23:19,660 --> 00:23:21,630
...is critical.
399
00:23:27,630 --> 00:23:30,470
Plants draw water from intake ponds
400
00:23:30,570 --> 00:23:35,210
filled up from nearby creeks or rivers.
401
00:23:35,310 --> 00:23:36,880
Losing access to water
402
00:23:36,980 --> 00:23:39,980
is a gold miner's worst nightmare.
403
00:23:40,080 --> 00:23:42,350
- What's up, dude? - We're in deep, deep trouble.
404
00:23:42,450 --> 00:23:44,180
What do you mean? Something broke?
405
00:23:44,280 --> 00:23:45,790
They got our water shut down.
406
00:23:45,890 --> 00:23:48,020
What do you mean your water's shut down?
407
00:23:48,120 --> 00:23:50,490
Basically, we got served an injunction by the state.
408
00:23:50,590 --> 00:23:53,760
We can't use those ponds. We have no water right now.
409
00:23:53,860 --> 00:23:56,930
In Colorado, when Freddie's intake ponds
410
00:23:57,030 --> 00:24:01,870
were ruled off limits, he was forced to get creative.
411
00:24:01,970 --> 00:24:05,810
Here's our only option. Our cut from last year.
412
00:24:05,910 --> 00:24:08,640
Line it and get it filled with water.
413
00:24:11,550 --> 00:24:12,950
Narrator: Freddie's plan...
414
00:24:13,050 --> 00:24:16,180
Turn an old cut into a giant holding pond
415
00:24:16,280 --> 00:24:22,290
by lining it with 70,000 square feet of polyethylene sheets.
416
00:24:22,390 --> 00:24:25,620
He'll then fill it with 4.5 million gallons
417
00:24:25,690 --> 00:24:29,930
of fresh water pumped from a nearby river.
418
00:24:30,030 --> 00:24:32,330
- Okay. We good? - Good.
419
00:24:32,430 --> 00:24:34,570
Loader coming in.
420
00:24:37,200 --> 00:24:41,470
I want to be filling this pond up tonight.
421
00:24:41,580 --> 00:24:44,910
And go over this way in front of the excavator.
422
00:24:45,010 --> 00:24:47,210
Well, that's the first piece of many.
423
00:24:47,310 --> 00:24:49,010
Two, three.
424
00:24:54,920 --> 00:24:56,360
Whew.
425
00:24:56,460 --> 00:24:59,490
We got to figure out a way to do this a little bit faster.
426
00:25:01,730 --> 00:25:05,130
Narrator: Freddy swaps manpower for horsepower.
427
00:25:06,770 --> 00:25:08,370
Here goes nothing, guys!
428
00:25:08,470 --> 00:25:09,740
Man #6: This is the last time
429
00:25:09,840 --> 00:25:12,270
you all are gonna see Freddy dodge.
430
00:25:19,250 --> 00:25:22,550
Oh, . .
431
00:25:25,590 --> 00:25:28,050
One down!
432
00:25:28,150 --> 00:25:31,460
That's a steep .
433
00:25:31,560 --> 00:25:33,990
Makes my butthole pucker.
434
00:25:40,100 --> 00:25:42,330
Man #7: Oh, my
435
00:25:47,870 --> 00:25:53,480
Narrator: After the liner, next up, the waterproof plastic.
436
00:25:53,580 --> 00:25:55,510
Okay, Freddy. You're hooked up.
437
00:25:57,320 --> 00:25:58,850
Load it!
438
00:26:01,660 --> 00:26:04,560
That's all right. Keep going!
439
00:26:04,660 --> 00:26:09,660
Got it. Get your foot on it. Get some rocks on there.
440
00:26:09,760 --> 00:26:13,230
This is the only time when 300 pounds helps.
441
00:26:19,310 --> 00:26:21,670
We're ready to roll. All we need's water.
442
00:26:21,780 --> 00:26:24,010
Thurber, go ahead and fire that pump up.
443
00:26:30,020 --> 00:26:32,080
Freddy: Water! Water!
444
00:26:34,890 --> 00:26:37,360
- Yeah. - Hoo!
445
00:26:43,300 --> 00:26:44,930
Fire it up.
446
00:26:47,330 --> 00:26:49,230
Here it comes, Kev.
447
00:26:51,500 --> 00:26:55,140
We got water coming, Fred.
448
00:26:55,240 --> 00:26:56,810
Freddy: It feels damn good.
449
00:26:56,910 --> 00:27:00,250
That water right there, that means gold.
450
00:27:03,150 --> 00:27:04,380
Narrator: Coming up...
451
00:27:04,480 --> 00:27:06,990
Man #8: They're just filthy, dirty with gold.
452
00:27:07,090 --> 00:27:08,320
Looking at a big one.
453
00:27:08,420 --> 00:27:11,590
...the moment all the hard work pays off.
454
00:27:11,690 --> 00:27:14,030
Holy smokes! Look at that thing!
455
00:27:19,000 --> 00:27:21,200
Narrator: The secrets to making a fortune...
456
00:27:21,300 --> 00:27:23,100
- Whoo-hoo! - Yeah!
457
00:27:23,200 --> 00:27:26,740
Narrator: ...From 10 years of gold mining.
458
00:27:26,840 --> 00:27:27,940
I'm a little bit excited.
459
00:27:28,040 --> 00:27:29,540
In the frozen north,
460
00:27:29,640 --> 00:27:34,210
miners encounter many types of gold.
461
00:27:34,310 --> 00:27:35,450
Oh-ho-ho! Oh, baby!
462
00:27:35,550 --> 00:27:38,020
Up-mountain, near the mother lode,
463
00:27:38,120 --> 00:27:41,350
chunky nuggets and pickers.
464
00:27:41,450 --> 00:27:43,860
That'll look good. On a necklace.
465
00:27:43,960 --> 00:27:46,790
Down valley in ancient stream beds,
466
00:27:46,890 --> 00:27:51,100
flakes and super-fine flour gold.
467
00:27:51,200 --> 00:27:54,800
Man #9: Without question, this is the hardest gold to capture.
468
00:27:54,900 --> 00:27:57,000
Narrator: To catch all this gold,
469
00:27:57,100 --> 00:28:00,670
wash plants rely on one vital part.
470
00:28:00,770 --> 00:28:04,710
Man #10: This is our moneymaker. This is our sluice box.
471
00:28:04,810 --> 00:28:08,310
Narrator: At the top of the sluice's chute,
472
00:28:08,420 --> 00:28:12,350
angled riffles are designed to trap large chunks,
473
00:28:12,450 --> 00:28:16,420
while further down, smaller, expanded metal riffles
474
00:28:16,520 --> 00:28:19,560
should recover the finer gold.
475
00:28:19,660 --> 00:28:21,760
Man #11: A piece of gold that likes one situation
476
00:28:21,860 --> 00:28:23,300
doesn't like another.
477
00:28:23,400 --> 00:28:25,200
Big red' sluice box. Right here.
478
00:28:25,300 --> 00:28:28,030
Narrator: Setting up sluices is a fine art,
479
00:28:28,130 --> 00:28:29,770
and if they're not right,
480
00:28:29,870 --> 00:28:32,910
a miner can lose millions of dollars.
481
00:28:33,010 --> 00:28:37,210
Remember one thing, Todd. Slick plates can't catch gold.
482
00:28:37,310 --> 00:28:39,680
I'm just blowing my gold right frickin' down the creek.
483
00:28:39,780 --> 00:28:41,280
Correct.
484
00:28:46,350 --> 00:28:50,460
Narrator: 2013... Parker is on good pay dirt
485
00:28:50,560 --> 00:28:54,230
but suspects his old wash plant, little blue,
486
00:28:54,330 --> 00:28:57,500
is losing gold out of the end of the sluice box.
487
00:28:57,600 --> 00:28:59,500
We want our gold dropping way up there
488
00:28:59,600 --> 00:29:01,970
in the first three feet.
489
00:29:02,070 --> 00:29:05,470
Narrator: The only time a miner doesn't want to find gold
490
00:29:05,570 --> 00:29:07,840
is in fine tailings
491
00:29:07,940 --> 00:29:11,810
because that means it's not being caught in the sluices.
492
00:29:11,910 --> 00:29:14,750
We've got some problems. Gold.
493
00:29:14,850 --> 00:29:16,920
Ah .
494
00:29:19,420 --> 00:29:22,790
Last thing you want to do is piss gold out.
495
00:29:22,890 --> 00:29:25,990
The ground around here has a lot of garnets,
496
00:29:26,090 --> 00:29:27,860
and that's all this, like, red stuff.
497
00:29:27,960 --> 00:29:29,630
And what it looks like is happening
498
00:29:29,730 --> 00:29:32,870
is the garnets are packing these riffles up,
499
00:29:32,970 --> 00:29:35,670
and there's no spot for the gold to drop.
500
00:29:44,010 --> 00:29:46,250
See that? Garnets.
501
00:29:48,310 --> 00:29:50,980
What do you think we're doing wrong here?
502
00:29:54,690 --> 00:29:56,760
Narrator: Normal riffles work
503
00:29:56,860 --> 00:30:00,630
because gold is 19 times denser than water.
504
00:30:00,730 --> 00:30:02,800
It drops and gets trapped
505
00:30:02,900 --> 00:30:06,600
while lighter dirt washes up and away.
506
00:30:06,700 --> 00:30:10,270
But the garnets are almost as heavy as the gold
507
00:30:10,370 --> 00:30:14,940
and are clogging up the riffles, causing gold to wash out.
508
00:30:15,040 --> 00:30:18,280
Tony's plan... Install hydraulic riffles,
509
00:30:18,380 --> 00:30:21,810
which create vortices to agitate the garnets,
510
00:30:21,920 --> 00:30:25,380
allowing the heavier gold to settle on the bottom
511
00:30:25,490 --> 00:30:28,050
while the garnets collect on top.
512
00:30:36,000 --> 00:30:38,430
Parker: It's the magical cure.
513
00:30:38,530 --> 00:30:39,830
What do you think, man?
514
00:30:39,930 --> 00:30:42,030
I think they should drop right in.
515
00:30:42,140 --> 00:30:43,970
You know how to set these up?
516
00:30:44,070 --> 00:30:46,240
Can't be too complicated. Water goes in there
517
00:30:46,340 --> 00:30:48,470
and comes out... I don't know... everywhere.
518
00:30:48,580 --> 00:30:50,340
These hydraulic riffles are kind of a gamble.
519
00:30:50,380 --> 00:30:52,210
And to be perfectly honest,
520
00:30:52,310 --> 00:30:54,710
we had something that was working.
521
00:30:54,810 --> 00:30:56,420
We know it wasn't working 100%,
522
00:30:56,520 --> 00:31:01,390
but now we have something that... we have no clue.
523
00:31:01,490 --> 00:31:06,190
And I don't like not knowing what's going on with my money.
524
00:31:06,290 --> 00:31:08,530
Ready for water, boys!
525
00:31:16,640 --> 00:31:18,670
We won't know until we run some dirt on it,
526
00:31:18,770 --> 00:31:20,910
so let's throw a few buckets in, huh?
527
00:31:33,350 --> 00:31:35,430
It looks like the hydraulic riffles are working pretty well,
528
00:31:35,460 --> 00:31:39,560
but we won't really know until our next clean-out.
529
00:31:39,660 --> 00:31:43,360
Narrator: After a 12-hour shift, Parker shuts down
530
00:31:43,460 --> 00:31:46,300
to see if the hydraulic riffles have worked.
531
00:31:51,440 --> 00:31:53,270
You seeing any color in there?
532
00:31:53,370 --> 00:31:55,940
I mean, all the garnets. That's a pile of garnets.
533
00:31:56,040 --> 00:31:57,310
Huh? Yeah.
534
00:31:57,410 --> 00:31:59,610
It's not really clearing them.
535
00:32:02,880 --> 00:32:04,980
Yeah. There's a lot of them.
536
00:32:24,940 --> 00:32:27,170
- It's a nice chunk of gold.
537
00:32:27,270 --> 00:32:29,070
That's pretty nice.
538
00:32:31,840 --> 00:32:33,080
- Yeah. - Huh?
539
00:32:33,180 --> 00:32:34,480
Nice gold in the mat.
540
00:32:34,580 --> 00:32:36,780
Let's get this shift out of here and...
541
00:32:36,880 --> 00:32:40,990
The box looks good. You know?
542
00:32:41,090 --> 00:32:43,990
The viking even had a bit of a smile on his face.
543
00:32:50,700 --> 00:32:53,870
Narrator: Checking the sluices is a miner's first chance
544
00:32:53,970 --> 00:32:56,400
to see if they're on the gold.
545
00:33:02,080 --> 00:33:06,080
But until they've pulled the mats and cleaned the gold,
546
00:33:06,180 --> 00:33:09,410
they won't know if all the hard work has paid off.
547
00:33:12,620 --> 00:33:17,490
The mats contain all the gold and fine heavy material.
548
00:33:17,590 --> 00:33:19,930
Next, the miner must wash out the gold
549
00:33:20,060 --> 00:33:22,230
with more precise equipment.
550
00:33:22,330 --> 00:33:24,330
In their second season mining,
551
00:33:24,430 --> 00:33:27,970
the Hoffmans invested in a gold table and a jig
552
00:33:28,070 --> 00:33:31,540
and called on gold-recovery expert Freddy dodge.
553
00:33:31,640 --> 00:33:33,110
We're ready.
554
00:33:35,440 --> 00:33:38,010
Freddy loads concentrate from the mats
555
00:33:38,110 --> 00:33:41,710
into a mini wash plant called a duplex jig.
556
00:33:46,890 --> 00:33:48,620
Freddy: Just try to keep a constant feed
557
00:33:48,720 --> 00:33:50,960
of our materials in our feeder.
558
00:33:51,060 --> 00:33:53,090
We're putting it into a slurry.
559
00:33:53,190 --> 00:33:55,130
Then it's going down to the screen deck.
560
00:33:55,230 --> 00:33:57,100
Our screen deck's cleaning our material
561
00:33:57,200 --> 00:33:59,530
and getting our fine material out.
562
00:34:01,330 --> 00:34:04,170
Narrator: The fine material flows into the jig
563
00:34:04,270 --> 00:34:09,940
and onto a pulsating bed of steel shot on a fine screen.
564
00:34:10,040 --> 00:34:11,940
Only the heaviest material,
565
00:34:12,050 --> 00:34:16,380
black sand and fine gold, falls through.
566
00:34:16,480 --> 00:34:19,920
It's a simple process that works extremely well.
567
00:34:26,960 --> 00:34:28,860
What is that going right through the bottom?
568
00:34:28,960 --> 00:34:30,660
Is that gold coming through here, Fred?
569
00:34:30,760 --> 00:34:32,360
Yeah, you can see some gold in there.
570
00:34:32,470 --> 00:34:33,570
Oh. Sweet.
571
00:34:33,670 --> 00:34:35,970
Here's our fine gold.
572
00:34:36,070 --> 00:34:40,140
So, now we've got a majority of our heavies
573
00:34:40,240 --> 00:34:41,670
and our gold.
574
00:34:41,770 --> 00:34:43,880
You can see the gold in it.
575
00:34:43,980 --> 00:34:48,180
This is, uh, fan-damn-tastic, you know?
576
00:34:48,280 --> 00:34:50,980
Todd: Let's get the table rolling, huh?
577
00:34:51,080 --> 00:34:52,560
Freddy: See what's in your fine stuff, Todd.
578
00:34:52,590 --> 00:34:56,760
Jack: Yeah. This is the big-time.
579
00:34:56,860 --> 00:34:59,560
Narrator: The final step...
580
00:34:59,660 --> 00:35:02,130
Feed the super concentrated material
581
00:35:02,230 --> 00:35:04,200
onto the oscillating gold table.
582
00:35:04,300 --> 00:35:06,330
Freddy: These grooves are catching our material
583
00:35:06,430 --> 00:35:09,000
so I'll be able to cut the gold right out of it
584
00:35:09,100 --> 00:35:11,170
and we'll get rid of the rest of them.
585
00:35:20,050 --> 00:35:21,310
Is that it, dad?
586
00:35:21,410 --> 00:35:23,580
That's it. That's the first chunk.
587
00:35:23,680 --> 00:35:26,620
It came down, dropped down and went back up here.
588
00:35:26,720 --> 00:35:27,720
It's coming down.
589
00:35:27,820 --> 00:35:29,320
There we go.
590
00:35:29,420 --> 00:35:31,590
There it goes, it's in the bucket.
591
00:35:34,560 --> 00:35:36,130
Hey, guys, let's see what you did.
592
00:35:43,840 --> 00:35:47,370
There we go, Todd. See how much gold you've got.
593
00:35:55,250 --> 00:35:58,250
- 4 ounces. - Yee-haw!
594
00:35:58,350 --> 00:36:00,050
Good lord.
595
00:36:05,420 --> 00:36:06,790
Narrator: Having cleaned up,
596
00:36:06,890 --> 00:36:08,860
all that's left is to weigh the gold...
597
00:36:08,960 --> 00:36:09,860
Man #13: Wow.
598
00:36:12,730 --> 00:36:16,000
...and turn it into cold hard cash.
599
00:36:24,480 --> 00:36:26,510
Narrator: Once a cut is mined out,
600
00:36:26,610 --> 00:36:28,580
gold miners are required by law
601
00:36:28,680 --> 00:36:31,050
to restore the land to its natural state.
602
00:36:31,150 --> 00:36:33,100
Rick: You've got to dig up a lot of ground to get gold,
603
00:36:33,120 --> 00:36:37,190
but that doesn't mean we got to leave it, you know, a mess.
604
00:36:37,290 --> 00:36:39,860
Parker: I feel proud of what we've done here.
605
00:36:39,960 --> 00:36:42,430
It's an area that we've mined and reclaimed.
606
00:36:42,530 --> 00:36:44,730
We spent a lot of time building a whole new creek bed
607
00:36:44,830 --> 00:36:47,370
and putting infrastructures and...
608
00:36:47,470 --> 00:36:50,000
And building the banks right and all the slopes right,
609
00:36:50,100 --> 00:36:52,640
and it's a complicated thing.
610
00:36:52,740 --> 00:36:54,070
And it looks good.
611
00:36:54,170 --> 00:36:56,440
Not only does it look good, but it's good habitat, too.
612
00:36:56,540 --> 00:36:57,690
You know, we've done a good job
613
00:36:57,710 --> 00:37:00,280
of putting things the way they should be.
614
00:37:00,380 --> 00:37:02,180
You're welcome, otters!
615
00:37:04,580 --> 00:37:05,720
They love it here.
616
00:37:10,560 --> 00:37:14,330
Narrator: For miners, the gold weigh is everything.
617
00:37:14,430 --> 00:37:17,430
Man #14: Are we rich beyond our wildest dream?
618
00:37:17,530 --> 00:37:20,770
Narrator: The moment months of backbreaking work pay off.
619
00:37:20,870 --> 00:37:23,240
- 120. - Oh!
620
00:37:23,340 --> 00:37:25,600
Rick: Hundred and... what the
621
00:37:25,710 --> 00:37:28,970
We broke the scale!
622
00:37:29,080 --> 00:37:30,740
- Yeah! - That's what we need!
623
00:37:30,840 --> 00:37:32,040
Man #15: Look at that.
624
00:37:36,480 --> 00:37:38,150
Yeah.
625
00:37:38,250 --> 00:37:41,250
Jack: 1,000, 1,644.
626
00:37:41,350 --> 00:37:43,490
3,032.
627
00:37:45,760 --> 00:37:47,060
Parker: We're perfectionists,
628
00:37:47,160 --> 00:37:49,360
and every year we get a little more perfect.
629
00:37:51,460 --> 00:37:55,370
Narrator: To turn impure gold dust into legal tender
630
00:37:55,470 --> 00:37:58,070
involves one final process.
631
00:38:04,540 --> 00:38:07,080
In his second season, Parker Schnabel
632
00:38:07,180 --> 00:38:11,720
goes to specialist Don Kinsey to smelt his first-ever bar
633
00:38:11,820 --> 00:38:14,490
of pure gold bullion.
634
00:38:14,590 --> 00:38:17,720
Don puts a mixture of gold and flux
635
00:38:17,820 --> 00:38:20,530
into a heat-resistant crucible.
636
00:38:20,630 --> 00:38:23,700
This is soda ash,
637
00:38:23,800 --> 00:38:27,770
and the other material I'll add is borax,
638
00:38:27,870 --> 00:38:30,000
which is a soap.
639
00:38:30,100 --> 00:38:33,910
So once again, you're cleaning the gold.
640
00:38:34,010 --> 00:38:37,540
Don transfers the gold and flux mixture,
641
00:38:37,640 --> 00:38:43,150
then puts it in a furnace that he heats to over 2,500 degrees.
642
00:38:49,960 --> 00:38:54,130
I never, never watched gold being melted or poured
643
00:38:54,230 --> 00:38:57,160
or any of that kind of stuff before.
644
00:39:00,800 --> 00:39:04,900
Narrator: The soda ash and borax, known as flux,
645
00:39:05,000 --> 00:39:10,240
react with the impurities in the inert gold to form waste slag.
646
00:39:21,720 --> 00:39:23,420
Don: Stay calm, nobody panic.
647
00:39:25,960 --> 00:39:27,730
As the gold cools,
648
00:39:27,830 --> 00:39:30,530
a dark crust forms on the surface.
649
00:39:38,340 --> 00:39:40,070
Okay, here we go.
650
00:39:40,170 --> 00:39:45,140
This slag contains iron and a trace of silver.
651
00:39:54,250 --> 00:39:59,190
All season, we work to get that, and it's pretty cool.
652
00:40:01,530 --> 00:40:04,530
Narrator: Parker has since become an expert smelter
653
00:40:04,630 --> 00:40:06,230
in his own right.
654
00:40:08,800 --> 00:40:10,270
Chris: Don't spill it.
655
00:40:12,940 --> 00:40:14,610
Parker: Oh, my table's leaning.
656
00:40:16,880 --> 00:40:17,780
Thanks, Chris.
657
00:40:17,880 --> 00:40:19,740
I'm here to help you, Parker.
658
00:40:19,850 --> 00:40:22,110
Each bar weighs 100 ounces.
659
00:40:22,210 --> 00:40:27,850
In 2015, one was worth $110,000.
660
00:40:27,950 --> 00:40:30,860
But five years later, rising gold prices
661
00:40:30,960 --> 00:40:35,290
mean it's worth $60,000 more.
662
00:40:35,390 --> 00:40:36,830
Oh, geez.
663
00:40:39,470 --> 00:40:42,300
I'll sit home alone at night and cry and clean gold bars.
664
00:40:42,400 --> 00:40:43,500
Clean gold bars.
665
00:40:43,600 --> 00:40:46,470
Yeah, what a horrible thing for you to do,
666
00:40:46,570 --> 00:40:48,870
sit home alone on a Friday night
667
00:40:48,970 --> 00:40:50,840
polishing your bars, huh?
668
00:40:50,940 --> 00:40:53,080
And crying.
669
00:40:53,180 --> 00:40:54,380
Don't forget the crying.
670
00:40:58,050 --> 00:41:00,820
To get to a gold bar
671
00:41:00,920 --> 00:41:03,520
from virgin ground
672
00:41:03,620 --> 00:41:06,760
takes ingenuity, hard graft,
673
00:41:06,860 --> 00:41:08,330
and a little luck.
674
00:41:08,430 --> 00:41:10,460
For a bunch of idiots, we did pretty good.
675
00:41:10,560 --> 00:41:12,800
Can you imagine once we figure out what we're doing?
676
00:41:14,800 --> 00:41:17,270
And if you're up for the challenge...
677
00:41:17,370 --> 00:41:20,070
There's gold from here to eternity!
678
00:41:20,170 --> 00:41:21,840
Narrator: ...You, too... Ding!
679
00:41:21,940 --> 00:41:24,640
...can end up with millions in gold.
680
00:41:29,850 --> 00:41:31,320
Jack: You're all millionaires.
681
00:41:31,420 --> 00:41:33,890
The only thing is you got to get it out of the ground.
681
00:41:34,305 --> 00:42:34,940
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