no they did not
he found a bit of gold during 1856
to find silver and gold
Yes, there have been times in history when silver has been worth more than gold, such as during the Roman Empire and the 19th century.
Everybody rushed to the west at this time in hopes of finding gold during the Gold Rush. The cities most people flocked to were Denver, Sacramento and San Francisco.
To go and find gold, because it was during the gold rush in most west states.
The aboriginals actually traded gold with the miners
Nevada
First find the verb. In this case it is "is."Now ask "What is?" It would be easy to say that "gold" is, except that gold follows the preposition "of." The simple subject is "history". History is exciting; "of gold" just adds detail as to what kind of history or which history.
he found a bit of gold during 1856
to find silver and gold
Yes, there have been times in history when silver has been worth more than gold, such as during the Roman Empire and the 19th century.
Gold was discovered in California, so everyone was trying to find riches.
you bith
To find gold and visit the motherland
Yes they did. Explosives were used in mines to find gold ore.
In a sense it was, if you were the first to find gold on a site and then record the claim. After the early days, it was more difficult to find gold since it had to be mined from deeper areas and then separated from the ore.
No, Jacques Cartier did not find gold during his explorations of Canada in the 16th century. His primary goal was to find a passage to Asia and establish French colonies, but he did not discover any significant gold deposits.