it costed ya mum and ya dad and ya brother and ya sister and 1000 shillings for a pan in the austalian gold rush and a brown nugget in the toilet.
$5
shasd
before the gold rush, a pick cost about two or three dollars, but after the gold rush the price was raised to six dollars
A shovel during the gold rush would cost $11.
$100.000
Before the California gold rush, a metal pan 30 cents, but after gold was discovered, pans sold for 15 dollars.
It cost $5.
it was just a little more than its reguilar price
liver
During the gold rush, people would sell the long tom for as much as they could. There were no set prices. A seller may sell a long tom for $50 today and $80 the next.
10 pounds an ounce
During the California gold rush, few people made their fortune panning or mining gold. The real winners were the merchants, who were smart enough to know that selling certain essential items that had huge demand, would make them wealthy. Needed tools drew enormous prices such as the pick ax, which went for $50 a piece.
The Chinese had to pay a levey of 10 pounds for every Chinese person that landed in Victoria.