Posted on 07/08/2025 7:32:39 AM PDT by Red Badger
The cube would probably look a little something like this. Image credit: Clark Ukidu / Shutterstock
Hearing stories of the largest gold nugget ever found, or the recent 2.6 kilogram (5.7 pound) discovery by an amateur aussie gold hunter, you might be fooled into thinking we’ve discovered a massive amount of gold on Earth.
Well, it might come as a surprise to learn that all the gold discovered so far could fit inside a puny 23 by 23 meter (75 by 75 foot) cube – that’s about the length of a cricket pitch. Despite its relatively small size, this cube would weigh eight times as much as the Statue of Liberty.
How much gold have we found? The estimated amount of gold mined throughout history is said to be around 187,000 tons, with the total discovered amount being about 244,000 tons. And thanks to gold’s virtually indestructible nature and its ability to be recycled, pretty much all of this is still around.
Around 2,756 to 3,307 tons of gold are mined each year, with more than 30 percent of all gold coming from the Witwatersrand Basin mine in South Africa. Currently, China is the biggest miner of gold, while the single largest gold-mining complex is Barrick Gold’s Nevada Gold Mines, which produces a whopping 99,223 kilograms (3.5 million ounces) a year.
How much is still underground?
The gold left in the ground is measured either as “reserves”, which are economical to mine at current gold prices, or “resources”, which need more investigation to establish if they’re economical, or need to be sold at a higher price.
The US Geological Survey estimates below-ground reserves to be around 57,000 tons, that’s about 20 percent of discovered gold that is yet to be mined. This would mean we could potentially mine all currently known gold reserves in just over 17 years.
But advances in mining technology are making it both easier to discover new reserves and more economical to mine resources, so it’s not likely we’ll pillage all of Earth’s gold any time soon.
Mining companies are now flocking to Victoria, Australia, in what they’re calling a “second gold rush”. Here, they’re utilizing updated understandings of rock formation to better predict the location of gold preserves, and today’s modern drilling equipment is allowing for a higher yield.
Gold in hard-to-reach places There are also a number of gold preserves we’re aware of on Earth that are not economical to mine, and likely never will be.
Known deposits in Antarctica would require extensive equipment and risk to retrieve in the continent’s harsh climate. Similarly, there’s thought to be gold throughout the ocean floor, but with no viable way of getting to it, the value of the yield would never justify the advances.
Looking further afield, there are also gold preserves on the Moon. While we might one day have a lunar base, currently, mining Moon-gold would cost much more than the market value. But maybe the Artemis II crew should pack their gold pans just in case.
In Beverly Hills.
In somebody else's name.
A baseball diamond is 90 feet on a side, so it would fit in the infield................
“that’s about the length of a cricket pitch.”
What’s that in rods to the hogshead?
You beat me by three seconds!
And, that is about 1% of the gold that is recoverable. At a profit, ‘Ell no. But, it has been identified and can be mined.
The Annunaki took a bunch from us.
I had to sell an ounce of gold to help cover my real estate taxes this year. Illinois is merciless. Here is a website that is actively fighting real estate taxes - in all states.
The End of Property Tax As You Know It | The Biggest Scam in History
They used to compare to the size of a tennis court.
Riiiiight...
There is gold disseminated all over the earth, primarily in igneous rock. One part per million here. One part per billion there. I am sure there is a small quantity of gold in your backyard. But you would need a small pair of tweezers to pick it up.
I live in Florida. My backyard is sand. Any gold that was there sank to the mantle eons ago!..............
The answer is whichever one my ex doesn't find first.
Nope. Go out there with a magnifying glass. In the middle of the day when the sun is at its peak. It will glitter like gold. Similar to the sweat on your brow.
I had to sell an ounce of gold to help cover my real estate taxes this year.
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Sorry to hear. However, if you bought Gold around 2001 it was $260 oz/t…..today, $3,300 oz/t……its rise outpaced the pirates taking.
That said, a relative fled Illinois ( Chicago area) to Arizona. He was lucky to find a buyer for his house, the housing market is collapsing. The last thirty years of property taxes wiped out much of his house sale “gains”.
“one must ask why are the World’s Central Banks buying historic, record amounts of Gold?”
Exactly! one must ask why is Russia’s Central Banks selling historic, record amounts of Gold?
Just don't hide it in your mother's basement like I did.
Last time I looked editors had basic intellectual competence.
I don’t want to know what the qualifications are now, but if somebody does, it is probably something I should know.
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