This Process Was, No Doubt, A Profitable One To The Portuguese,
And It Is Probable That, With The Improved Plan By Means Of Mercury,
The Sands Would Be Lucrative.
I had an opportunity of examining
the gold-dust from different parts to the east and northeast of Tete.
There are six well-known washing-places.
These are called
Mashinga, Shindundo, Missala, Kapata, Mano, and Jawa.
From the description of the rock I received, I suppose gold is found
both in clay shale and quartz. At the range Mushinga to the N.N.W.
the rock is said to be so soft that the women pound it into powder
in wooden mortars previous to washing.
Round toward the westward, the old Portuguese indicate a station
which was near to Zumbo on the River Panyame, and called Dambarari,
near which much gold was found. Farther west lay the now unknown
kingdom of Abutua, which was formerly famous for the metal; and then,
coming round toward the east, we have the gold-washings of the Mashona,
or Bazizulu, and, farther east, that of Manica, where gold is found
much more abundantly than in any other part, and which has been
supposed by some to be the Ophir of King Solomon. I saw the gold
from this quarter as large as grains of wheat, that found in the rivers
which run into the coal-field being in very minute scales.
If we place one leg of the compasses at Tete, and extend the other
three and a half degrees, bringing it round from the northeast of Tete
by west, and then to the southeast, we nearly touch or include
all the known gold-producing country.
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