placer mining, ancient method of using water to excavate, transport, concentrate, and recover heavy minerals from alluvial or placer deposits. Examples of deposits mined by means of this technique are the gold-bearing sands and gravel that settle out from rapidly moving streams and rivers at points where the current slows down. Placer mining takes advantage of gold’s high density, which causes it to sink more rapidly from moving water than the lighter siliceous materials with which it is found. Though the basic principles of placer mining have not altered since early times, methods have improved considerably.
Panning, used by miners during the great gold strikes of the 19th century, employed a pan in which a few handfuls of the gold-bearing soil or gravel and a large amount of water were placed. By swirling the contents of the pan, the miner washed the lighter material over the side, leaving the gold and heavy materials behind.
An improvement over the pan was the rocker, or cradle, named for its resemblance to a child’s cradle. As it was rocked, it sifted large quantities of ore. Gravel was shoveled onto a perforated iron plate, and water was poured over it, causing finer material to drop through the perforations and onto an apron that distributed it across the riffles. The apron distributed the material across riffled pieces of wood or iron perpendicular to the bottom and sides of the cradle. As the material moved through the cradle, the gold was caught on the riffles, to be removed later.
In sluicing or hydraulicking methods, a slightly sloping wooden trough called a box sluice, or a ditch cut in hard gravel or rock called a ground sluice, is used as a channel along which gold-bearing gravel is carried by a stream of water. Riffles placed transversely along the bottom of the sluice cause the water to eddy into small basins, retarding the current so that gold may settle and be trapped.
Early in the 20th century, dredging became the most important method of mining placer deposits. In particular, bucket-ladder dredging, which is characterized by a continuous chain of buckets that rotate around a rigid adjustable frame called the ladder, is used worldwide. A later method known as paddock dredging allows placer deposits to be mined even when they are not adjacent to a river. In this method the dredge floats in its own pond, which is continuously extended by digging at one end while simultaneously being filled at the other end with waste, or tailings.
Typical minerals recovered by placer mining are gold, platinum, tin, diamonds, titaniferous and ferrous iron sands, and minor amounts of chromite, scheelite, columbite, monzonite, gemstones, and abrasives.