Who owns King of the Hill mine?

Who owns King of the Hill mine?

Red 5 Limited
King of the Hills is an underground and open-pit gold mine, owned by Greenstone Resources (WA) Pty Ltd, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Red 5 Limited (Red 5).

Where is King of the Hill mine?

Western Australia
Red 5’s 100%-owned King of the Hills Gold Mine is located 80km south of the Company’s Darlot Gold Mine and 28km north of the town of Leonora in the Eastern Goldfields region of Western Australia.

What do they mine in Leonora?

Gwalia mine is the cornerstone of Leonora Operations. It is located 235 kilometres from Kalgoorlie in Western Australia and has been owned by St Barbara since 2005. During this time it has produced more than 2.5 million ounces of gold.

Is there gold in Leonora?

Leonora is primarily a mining town. There are a number of major gold mines in the Shire, and the Murrin Murin laterite nickel project is located in the shire. The area is too arid to support agriculture, but there is a substantial pastoral industry.

Where is Warrawoona?

The Warrawoona Project is located within the East Pilbara Terrane of the Archean Pilbara Craton in Western Australia. The East Pilbara Terrane is characterised by large, dome-shaped composite granitic complexes wrapped by greenstone belts.

Why did Gwalia mine close?

After the headframe was damaged on 21 December 1963, it was announced that the mine would close immediately. Trains were despatched from Kalgoorlie and most Gwalia folk virtually walked away, taking with them what they could carry. In just under three weeks, the population of Gwalia dropped from about 1,200 to 40.

When did Gwalia mine close?

December 1963
The sudden closure of the mine in December 1963 turned Gwalia into a ghost town virtually overnight as the population fell from about 1,200 to just 40 people in three weeks.

Is there gold in Marble Bar?

There is a $10,000 fine for removing material from the location, but a public fossicking site is nearby (Kim Macdonald information). Gold was discovered near Marble Bar in 1891 (see Stray Shot Mindat locality), and a town gazetted by 1893. In 1891 there were 5,000 gold miners on the fields.

Did Herbert Hoover own a gold mine in Australia?

The Gwalia Gold Mine is located at Gwalia, a few kilometres south of Leonora, Western Australia. It was originally established by Welsh miners in the late 19th century and Herbert Hoover, the later President of the United States, served as the mine manager in its early days from May to November 1898.

Why was Gwalia abandoned?

The Sons of Gwalia underground mining operation continued until 1963. In December of that year, the mine had to be closed due to the depletion of mine resources. The population of the city declined to 40 people in less than three weeks.

Does anyone live in Gwalia?

Today, Gwalia is essentially a ghost town, having been largely deserted since the main source of employment, the Sons of Gwalia gold mine, closed in 1963. Just 4 kilometres (2.5 mi) north is the town of Leonora, which remains the hub for the area’s mining and pastoral industries.

Can you find red jasper in Australia?

In the Western Australian town of Marble Bar it is very much the case that all that glitters ain’t gold. Plenty of different colours catch the light in Australia’s hottest town and while it’s best known for attracting gold prospectors, Marble Bar also has another drawcard: red jasper.

Why is Marble Bar famous?

Today Marble Bar is synonymous with heat. It is known as ‘the hottest town in Australia’ a fact which is still recorded by the Guinness Book of Records. For 161 consecutive days to 20 April 1924 the temperature in the town never dropped below 100°F (37.8°C). This record still stands after over eighty years.

Did Herbert Hoover ever live in Australia?

Herbert Clark Hoover (August 10, 1874 – October 20, 1964) was an American geologist and mining engineer who had worked at several mines in Western Australia before he was appointed Mining Superintendent (manager) of the Sons of Gwalia Mine from 1 May 1898.

What happened to Sons of Gwalia?

Hoover was appointed superintendent of the Sons of Gwalia Mine and managed it from May to November 1898 before moving on to China. He was later to become 31st president of the United States (1929–1933). The mine operated continuously until 1963, when it closed and Sons of Gwalia, Limited was liquidated.

Where is Gwalia in Australia?

Gwalia is a former gold-mining town located 233 kilometres north of Kalgoorlie and 828 kilometres east of Perth in Western Australia’s Great Victoria Desert. Today, Gwalia is essentially a ghost town, having been largely deserted since the main source of employment, the Sons of Gwalia gold mine, closed in 1963.

When did the Sons of Gwalia mine close?

21 December 1963
On 21 December 1963, the gold mine at Gwalia closed and the town was reduced in population from 1,500 to 40. The Sons of Gwalia mining company was delisted for the first time on 4 February 1964. In 65 years of operation, the mine had produced 2.5 million troy ounces (78 tonnes) of gold.

Where is the king of the Hills Mine?

Location, geology and mineralisation of King of the Hills gold project The King of the Hills gold mine is located 80km south of Red 5’s Darlot gold mine and 28km north of Leonora town. Its mineralisation domains are hosted by a large trondhjemite granite pluton with overlying, strongly foliated mafic and ultramafic sequences.

What is King of the Hills Gold Project?

King of the Hills (KOTH) gold project is an underground gold mine located in the Eastern Goldfields region of Western Australia. The project is 100% owned by Red 5, which acquired the mine from Saracen Mineral in early 2017. Mining at the site started in January 2018.

When will the king of the hills mining project scale down?

Current underground mining operations are expected to scale down by December 2020. Read more about the King of the Hills Development Project. For further details on the King of the Hills Underground, refer to the Company’s recent ASX announcements and investor presentations.

What is red 5 doing at King of the hills?

Following the completion of a Final Feasibility Study in September 2020 for a proposed new 4Mtpa bulk open pit and underground mining and processing operation at King of the Hills, Red 5 will progressively scale-down current mining activities in 2H CY2020 in advance of the planned start of construction for the expanded operation.