The Gold Rush in Ontario The year was 1926. The big news of the day was a Gold Rush broke out in the relatively remote Red Lake in Northern Ontario. Many newspapers and journalists from around the world traveled to Ontario to cover the great gold rush of 1926. The adventurers, explorers, gold diggers and the whole world came to this remote location to retrieve their share of the fortune and glory, perhaps, this strike gold. Soon, the companies resumed their professional attention to the literal pot of gold that has apparently jumped out of nowhere with the promise of untold wealth wave. Planes roared overhead and the barking of dogs could be seen and heard on the track on the frozen lake.
The gold rush of Ontario was the first gold strike mall where modern transportation like planes were used, which gives those who could afford an obvious advantage over those who had to move painfully through the deep snow and difficult conditions to reach their destination. Unlike the previous strikes gold in the world, adventurers and explorers returned this time with advanced geological mining equipment rather than using simple tools crude.
As romantic as it seems, since that time, the Gold Rush in Ontario has seen a dramatic transformation. Today, taking part in gold rush has become a big business alike. Instead of braving the snowstorms and stake claims on their deathbed, mining companies now send their representatives, who managed to film their issues and demands as evidence, even if the rule still implies stake claims on mineral rights ownership. The gold rush continues in northern Ontario, but the environment must bear a heavy price for these encroachments.
In a rush of modern times, in September 1996 in the Temagami region of Northern Ontario, to stake claims to communicate with headquarters, everything has been smooth and officially. With the growing interest in the gold rush in the Ontario region of Canada, teams from more and more people, geologists and miners are flooding in these areas and, therefore, immense areas of pine forests (the natural resources of Ontario) are disappearing gradually. The days of the gold rush is over when the stakes were small and the number claiming to have been a handful. Today, staking claims is as much an event organized and commercial property eventual gold-filled property.
Posted on June 23, 2010.