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Dredge No. 4 (Hän: Lëzrą Kä̀nëchà "s/he is looking for money") is a wooden-hulled bucketline sluice dredge that mined placer gold on the Yukon River from 1913 until 1959. It is now located along Bonanza Creek Road 13 kilometres (8.1 mi) south of the Klondike Highway [ 1 ] near Dawson City , Yukon , where it is preserved as one of the ...
Bonanza Creek (Hän: Ch'ö`chozhù' ndek) is a watercourse in Yukon Territory, Canada. [2] It runs for about 20 miles (32 km) from King Solomon's Dome to the Klondike River . In the last years of the 19th century and the early 20th century, Bonanza Creek was the centre of the Klondike Gold Rush , which attracted tens of thousands of prospectors ...
Claim No. 37903 Bonanza Creek YT ... Dredge No. 4 National Historic Site Lot 586, group 1052 ... Warehouse No. 2 Bear Creek Compound Dawson City YT
The dredge commenced operations on lower Chicken Creek in September and worked for approximately five months every year thereafter until October 1967, when it produced its final cleanup. In 1998, the 500 ton dredge was moved overland to its current location at the Chicken Gold Camp.
Discovery Claim is a mining claim at Bonanza Creek, a watercourse in the Yukon, Canada. It is the site where, in the afternoon of August 16, 1896, the first piece of gold was found in the Yukon by prospectors. The site is considered to be the place where the Klondike gold rush started.
Dredge #4, Dawson City, Yukon, Canada. Photographed on 12 August 2009. The Dredge was a major gold producer during the early 20th Century. Joint ©© Arthur D. Chapman and Audrey Bendus. Date: Taken on 12 August 2009, 11:40: Source: Dredge #4, Dawson City, Yukon: Author: Arthur Chapman from Australia
Maenza, Italy. Italy's $1 home bonanza started in the village of Gangi in 2011, according to the LA Times. With 5,800 towns with fewer than 5,000 residents -- 2,300 of which are totally abandoned ...
It has a catchment area of 187 km 2 (72 sq mi), [1] and is an early tributary of the Battle River, to which it is connected through the Pigeon Lake Creek. Pigeon Lake was previously called "Woodpecker Lake". The name was changed to Pigeon Lake in 1858. In 1896, Pigeon Lake Indian Reserve was established on the southeast shore.