Hints to Prospectors and Owners of Treatment Plants
Government published booklet
Hints to Prospectors and Owners of Treatment Plants was a booklet published and distributed to gold prospectors in Australia, although its original focus was Western Australia in the 1930s.
It went to 10 editions and was published until the 1960s. Its main author was identified as the Perth Branch of the Royal Mint of Great Britain. Most editions had a list of major contributors, which included government officials in Western Australia.
...The owners and operators of Prospecting Areas, Leaseholds, Batteries and Treatment Plants in remote Mining Districts where facilities are few and conditions difficult...
Similar and earlier guides
In the era of earlier gold rushes, similar guides had appeared in the 1890s in other states,[2] and in other countries similar books had appeared.[3]
Origins
The Perth Mint's Anthea Harris, at a conference in 1999, summarised the origins of the book:[4] The Perth Mint also has a more recent online summary:[5]
In the 1930s, gold production was at an all time low and the gold price had risen so much that the value of the gold in a sovereign was worth more than its £1 token value. Britain came off the gold standard and sovereigns were no longer minted. This left the Perth Mint operating solely as a refinery; coining operations were at a standstill. The Commonwealth Treasury regarded Perth as too far from the centres of population in the east for it to be given any Australian currency to mint. The Deputy Master (the equivalent of the CEO today), H A Corbet realised that the Mint could help the thousands of prospectors who were driven by unemployment to try their luck. He published Hints to Prospectors and Owners of Treatment Plants in 1933. This was popular all over Australia and grew in size and scope through its ten editions.
Last edition was produced as the 10th edition again in 1960[22]
Current information
Information is still produced for prospectors in Western Australia by the Department of Mines and Petroleum,[23] and many recent publications follow similar patterns to the earlier guides and booklets but with added aids from more recent technology.[24][25]
^Corbet, H. A; Royal Mint (Great Britain). Perth Branch (1946), Hints to prospectors and owners of treatment plants (9th ed.), Issued by the Royal Mint, Perth, by authority W.H. Wyatt, Government Printer, retrieved 29 November 2014
^Corbet, H. A; Royal Mint (Great Britain). Perth Branch (1947), Hints to prospectors and owners of treatment plants (9th ed., rev ed.), Issued by the Royal Mint, Perth, by authority W.H. Wyatt, Government Printer, retrieved 29 November 2014
^Royal Mint (Great Britain). Perth Branch; Western Australia. Dept. of Mines; Western Australia. Public Health Dept (1960), Hints to prospectors and owners of treatment plants (10th ed.), Govt. Pr, retrieved 29 November 2014
^De Havelland, D. W. (David W.) (1985), Gold & ghosts : a prospectors guide to metal detecting and history of the Australian goldfields, Hesperian Press, ISBN978-0-85905-099-9
^Perry, Nance; Perry, Ron (1988), A prospector's guide to gold in Australia, Reed (published 1982), ISBN978-0-7301-0265-6