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Travels in the Interior of Africa — Volume 02 by Mungo Park
page 83 of 143 (58%)
women who have had the skin worn off the tops of their fingers in
this employment. Sometimes, however, they are rewarded by finding
pieces of gold, which they call sanoo birro (gold stones), that
amply repay them for their trouble. A woman and her daughter,
inhabitants of Kamalia, found in one day two pieces of this kind;
one of five drachms and the other of three drachms weight. But the
most certain and profitable mode of washing is practised in the
height of the dry season, by digging a deep pit, like a draw-well,
near some hill which has previously been discovered to contain gold.
The pit is dug with small spades or corn-hoes, and the earth is
drawn up in large calabashes. As the negroes dig through the
different strata of clay or sand, a calabash or two of each is
washed by way of experiment; and in this manner the labourers
proceed, until they come to a stratum containing gold, or until they
are obstructed by rocks, or inundated by water. In general, when
they come to a stratum of fine reddish sand, with small black specks
therein, they find gold in some proportion or other, and send up
large calabashes full of the sand for the women to wash; for though
the pit is dug by the men, the gold is always washed by the women,
who are accustomed from their infancy to a similar operation in
separating the husks of corn from the meal.

As I never descended into any one of these pits, I cannot say in
what manner they are worked underground. Indeed, the situation in
which I was placed made it necessary for me to be cautious not to
incur the suspicion of the natives by examining too far into the
riches of their country; but the manner of separating the gold from
the sand is very simple, and is frequently performed by the women in
the middle of the town; for when the searchers return, from the
valleys in the evening, they commonly bring with them each a
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