Thursday, February 5, 2009

Gold 100 Gram Bars


Quick Shipping
Northwest Territorial Mint is making limited quantities of 100 Gram Suisse PAMP gold bars available for shipment within seven business days of receipt of good funds (see item 3, “Payment/Holding Times” here). Offered at a lower premium over the spot price than gold bullion coins, these gold bars provide investors with a convenient and cost-effective way to own this precious metal. 

Investment Advantages
Gold bars of this or larger sizes do offer an important investment advantage: they carry a low premium over spot gold. These 100 Gram gold bars, while they have the look of an industrial product, are engraved with a serial number, and and accompanied with an official PAMP certificate of assay with matching serial number. They are recognized around the world as a standard trading medium and are therefore very liquid. 

Weighing in at 100 grams, a very manageable 3.21507 Troy ounces, these gold bars produced by the renowned refiner PAMP. These bars are a great way to concentrate your wealth in a convenient and portable form.

Suisse PAMP 100 Gram Gold Bars
Suisse PAMP 100 gram gold bars are available to order at prices indicated on the right. Each has an industrial finish embossed with the PAMP hallmark, purity and content with an engraved serial number and accompanied with an assay card. 

Gold bullion investors wanting to take delivery of their .9999-fine gold should find 100 gram gold bars easy to handle and store. 

Although a limited number of these Suisse PAMP bars is available, they can be shipped within seven business days of receipt of good funds for those who are interested in receiving their gold quickly. 

Minimum Purchase 
The minimum purchase of Suisse PAMP 100 gram gold bullion bars is 2 bars.

Gold Kilo Bars


Quick Shipping
Northwest Territorial Mint is making limited quantities of one-kilogram Johnson Matthey gold bars available for shipment within seven business days of receipt of good funds (see item 3, “Payment/Holding Times” here). Offered at a lower premium over the spot price than gold bullion coins, gold bars provide investors with a convenient and cost-effective way to own this precious metal. 

Investment Advantages
Gold bars of this or larger sizes do offer an important investment advantage: they carry a low premium over spot gold. One-kilo gold bars are an industrial product intended foremost as a storage means, and recognized around the world as a trading medium. They are therefore very liquid. 

Weighing in at one-kilogram — a satisfying 32.1507 Troy ounces — these gold bars produced by the renowned refiner Johnson Matthey are a great way to concentrate your wealth in a convenient and portable form. Johnson Matthey bars are known in the industry as a reliably pure bulk product.

Johnson Matthey 1-Kilo Gold Bars
1 kilo Johnson Matthey Gold Bars are available to order at prices indicated on the right. Each has an industrial finish embossed with the Johnson Matthey hallmark, purity and content with an engraved serial number. 

Gold bullion investors wanting to take delivery of their .9999-fine gold should find 1-kilo gold bars easy to handle and store. 

Although a limited number of these Johnson Matthey bars is available, they can be shipped within seven business days of receipt of good funds for those who are interested in receiving their gold quickly. 

Minimum Purchase 
The minimum purchase of Johnson Matthey 1-kilo gold bullion bars is just one bar

Gram Gold Bullion Bars


Northwest Territorial Mint sells two brands of gold bars: the trusted brands of PAMP (Produits Artistiques de Métaux Précieux) and Credit Suisse. 

PAMP
Accredited as “Good Delivery” by the Swiss National Bank and the London Bullion Market Association, PAMP 24-Karat gold bars contain a purity of 99.99% and have been traded on world investment markets since 1979. PAMP is available in gram sizes as follows: 10 grams, 5 grams and 1 gram. PAMP bars are also available in 1 and 10 ounce sizes, please see our Gold Ounce Bar page for pricing and availability. 

PAMP Gram Sizes Available:
• 10 gram (Minimum purchase 10, can be mixed. For purchases of smaller amounts with higher premium, go to our online store.) 
• 5 gram (Minimum purchase 10, can be mixed. For purchases of smaller amounts with higher premium, go to our online store.) 
• 1 gram (Minimum purchase 20, can be mixed. For purchases of smaller amounts with higher premium, go to our online store.)

Gold Bullion Bars

Offered at a lower premium over the spot price than gold bullion coins, gold bars provide investors with a convenient and cost-effective way to own this precious metal. 

Northwest Territorial Mint sells a variety of gold bars determined by market availability, including trusted brands such as PAMP (Produits Artistiques de Métaux Précieux) and Credit Suisse, as well as products hallmarked by the Royal Canadian Mint.

While we strive to maintain a robust inventory of the gold bars listed, we are unable to guarantee delivery for a specific individual brand of gold bullion bar. As a result, the exact brand of bar(s) shipped will be determined by inventory at the time of shipment. 

Minimum Purchase
The minimum purchase of gold bullion bars is 5 ounces. If you are interested in purchasing less than 5 ounces, you can do so at our online store:
• Gold Bars

PAMP
Accredited as "Good Delivery" by the Swiss National Bank and the London Bullion Market Association, PAMP 24-Karat gold bars contain a purity of 99.99% and have been traded on world investment markets since 1979. 

Credit Suisse
Backed by the world renowned Credit Suisse Bank of Switzerland, these conveniently sized one-ounce gold bars are guaranteed .9999 pure. Each 24-Karat bar is stamped with its exact weight and gold purity and bears the Credit Suisse logo, an internationally recognized symbol of quality and sound provenance. 

Royal Canadian Mint
Recognized instantly throughout the world, the Royal Canadian Mint one-ounce gold bar is .9999 pure and guaranteed by the Government of Canada. Each bar comes stamped with its exact weight and purity and bears the hallmark of the world-famous Royal Canadian Mint. 

Sizes Available 
Gold bullion bars are available in the 1 Troy ounce size. In addition, the Swiss Pamp gold bullion bar has limited availability in the 10 Troy ounce size

British Sovereign Gold Coins


British Sovereign gold bullion coins are nickel-size gold bullion coins that were struck worldwide at the height of the British Empire.

First introduced in 1816, the British Sovereign gold coin came to be the world’s most widely distributed gold coin, a distribution which grew along with the British Empire to be minted in Pretoria, Bombay, Ottawa, Melbourne, Perth, and Sydney. Hundreds of millions of Sovereigns were struck at their peak of distribution in the late 1800s and early 1900s.

A large supply of gold Sovereigns and continued hoarding and trade all over the world cause these nickel-sized gold coins to be available today at bullion pricing. These coins portray the reigning monarch (sovereign, hence the name) on one side, and Pestrucci’s St. George slaying the Dragon on the other.

Market Value
Sovereign pricing is based on the current market “spot price” plus a premium per coin. The spot price of gold (and all precious metals) is reported every business day in all major newspapers, network television and radio and online. 

Minimum Purchase
The minimum purchase of gold sovereign coins is 10 coins. If you are interested in purchasing less than 10 coins, you can do so at our online store:
• Gold British Sovereign
(Higher markup and shipping charges will apply). 

Pre-1933 U.S. Gold Coins


Authorized in 1792, the $5 Liberty was the first gold coin ever struck for circulation by the U.S. Mint and is also the only coin in U.S. history to be produced at all seven federal mints. Prior to 1838, all Half Eagles were struck at the Philadelphia Mint. Like the Quarter Eagle, the design, composition, and weight of the Half Eagle changed many times throughout its production. Beginning in 1837 and until the Half Eagle was discontinued in 1929, it was struck from .900-fine gold. In 1908 the Liberty design was replaced with the Indian Head design

The Vienna Philharmonic


Backed by the government of Austria and minted by the Austrian Mint in Vienna, the Vienna Philharmonic is a widely owned gold bullion coin. 

Sizes Available 
Philharmonics are available in the 1 Troy Ounce size. Please call to check on the availability of fractional sizes. 

Minimum Purchase
The minimum purchase of gold bullion coins is 5 ounces. If you are interested in purchasing less than 5 ounces, you can do so at our online store:
• Gold Vienna Philharmonic 
(Higher markup and shipping charges will apply). 

 

Background of Vienna Philharmonics
Minted at the historic Austrian Mint in Vienna, internationally famous for producing exceptional gold coins for more than 800 years, the Philharmonic is one of the most gorgeous and coveted of all modern gold bullion coins. The world’s best selling Gold coin in 1992, 1995, 1996, the Philharmonic is struck in 999.9 fine gold.

The world famous Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra is the inspiration for this coin. A harmonious design of musical instruments from the Orchestra adorn the reverse side of the coin. The great organ in the Golden Hall in Vienna’s Musikverein is pictured on the obverse side of the coin. Also featured on this side are the the weight, fineness and year of issue. Face value is indicated in Austrian Schilling in mintings prior to December 31, 2001, and Euro afterwards

South African Krugerrand Gold Bullion Coins


The Krugerrand from South Africa, first minted in 1967, was the first gold coin to contain precisely one ounce of fine gold and intended as created to provide a vehicle for the private ownership of gold. By bestowing legal tender status upon the coin, Krugerrands could be owned by citizens of the United States, who at that time were prohibited private ownership of bullion, but allowed ownership of foreign coins.

Since inception, the Krugerrand has become the most widely owned bullion coin in the world with over 46 million ounces in circulation. The Krugerrand gets its name from Paul Kruger, featured on the obverse, president of the old South African Republic. The reverse depicts a springbok, one of the national symbols of South Africa. The name “South Africa” and the gold content are shown in both Afrikaans and English.

The success of the Krugerrand led to other gold producing nations minting their own bullion coins, including the Canadian Maple Leaf in 1979 and the American Eagle in 1986.coin1 diameter thickness purity

1 Troy Oz 32.6 mm 2.75 mm .917
1/2 Troy Oz 27.0 mm 2.24 mm .917
1/4 Troy Oz 22.0 mm 1.83 mm .917
1/10 Troy Oz 16.5 mm 1.19 mm .917

1. Coin given in gold content (actual weight higher). 


Minimum Purchase
The minimum purchase of gold bullion coins is 5 ounces. If you are interested in purchasing less than 5 ounces, you can do so at our online store:
• South African Krugerrand 1/10 Ounce 
• South African Krugerrand 1/4 Ounce 
• South African Krugerrand 1/2 Ounce 
• South African Krugerrand1 Ounce 
(Higher markup and shipping charges will apply). 

Market Value
Krugerrand pricing is based on the current market "spot price" plus a premium per coin. The spot price of gold (and all precious metals) is reported every business day in all major newspapers, network television, radio and online. 

Canadian Maple Leaf Gold Bullion Coins


Royal Canadian Mint Retooling 
The Royal Canadian Mint has currently rationed its gold Maple Leaf coin production. As an authorized retailer of these products, we are currently filling back orders with our limited rations. We estimate that any new orders you place will ship in 12-14 weeks, but you can be confident that all trades locked in will be shipped expeditiously as we receive supply of product from the Royal Canadian Mint. For those of you who wish to ensure a place in the queue, we will continue to lock in trades at our low premiums over spot.

Guaranteed by the Government of Canada and traded in world markets since 1979, gold Canadian Maple Leaf coins have become some of the most desirable bullion coins in the world today. Available in four sizes of, one-ounce, half-ounce, quarter-ounce and one-tenth ounce, all are beautifully struck with a gold purity of .9999. As a government issued gold bullion coin, it was the second to become available, after the South African Krugerrand.coin face* diameter thickness purity

1 Troy Oz $50.00 30 mm 2.87 mm .9999
1/2 Troy Oz $20.00 25 mm 2.20 mm .9999
1/4 Troy Oz $10.00 20 mm 1.78 mm .9999
1/10 Troy Oz $5.00 16 mm 1.13 mm .9999
1/20 Troy Oz $1.00 14 mm 0.92 mm .9999
*Face value is in Canadian Dollars.


Minimum Purchase
The minimum purchase of gold bullion coins is 5 ounces. If you are interested in purchasing less than 5 ounces, you can do so at our online store:
• Gold Maple Leaf 1/10 Ounce 
• Gold Maple Leaf 1/4 Ounce 
• Gold Maple Leaf 1/2 Ounce 
• Gold Maple Leaf 1 Ounce 
(Higher markup and shipping charges will apply). 

Market Value
Maple Leaf pricing is based on the current market “spot price” plus a premium per coin. The spot price of gold (and all precious metals) is reported every business day in all major newspapers, network television and radio and online. 
 

Coin Purity
The Royal Canadian Mint pioneered the concept of minting a gold coin without the need for a strengthening alloy in order to produce the gold Maple Leaf in such high purity. Such purity proved to be extremely popular with collectors and investors worldwide. A few years after its initial introduction, the Maple Leaf gold coin was outselling the Krugerrand. 

Coin Desgin
The classic design of the gold Maple Leaf coin is virtually unchanged from its introduction. The bust of Queen Elizabeth II appears on the obverse side of the coin, gracefully aging across various vintage coins in a design by Arnold Machin. Several other small changes can be found. The reverse depicts a single Canadian Maple Leaf, the national symbol of Canada. The finely detailed design has a proof-like strike

American Eagle Gold Coins


US Mint Production Delays
The US Mint is currently backlogged on gold American Eagle coin production. As an authorized retailer of these products, we estimate that any new orders you place will ship in 12-14 weeks, but you can be confident that all trades locked in will be shipped expeditiously as we receive supply of product from the US Mint. For those of you who wish to ensure a place in the queue, we will continue to lock in trades at our low premiums over spot.

The American Eagle gold bullion coin’s weight, content, and purity is guaranteed by the United States Government. Requiring no assaying, American Eagles are easily converted to cash at any time.coin* face diameter thickness purity

1 Troy Oz $50.00 32.7 mm 2.87 mm .9167
1/2 Troy Oz $25.00 27.0 mm 2.15 mm .9167
1/4 Troy Oz $10.00 22.0 mm 1.78 mm .9167
1/10 Troy Oz $5.00 16.5 mm 1.26 mm .9167

*Weight given is that of gold content. Actual weight is higher. 


Minimum Purchase
The minimum purchase of gold bullion coins is 5 ounces. If you are interested in purchasing less than 5 ounces, you can do so at our online store:
• Gold Eagle 1/10 Ounce
• Gold Eagle 1/4 Ounce
• Gold Eagle 1/2 Ounce
• Gold Eagle 1 Ounce
(Higher markup and shipping charges will apply). 

Market Value
Each American Eagle’s price is based on the current market “spot price” plus a premium per coin. The spot price of gold (and all precious metals) is reported every business day in all major newspapers, network television and radio and online. 

 

The Design
The beautiful and classic design of this gold bullion coin is captured in the graceful Striding Liberty, first created by Augustus Saint Gaudens for the 1907-1933 $20 U.S. Double Eagle gold coin. The reverse depicts a nest of American eagles signifying the strength and security of American families. Only gold mined in the United States, by law, is used in the minting of American Gold Eagles. Since its introduction in 1986, its four sizes, one-ounce, half-ounce, quarter-ounce and one-tenth ounce, have become the world’s most widely traded gold bullion coins

American Buffalo Gold Coins


To meet the demand of investors who seek the purest investment gold possible, the US Mint has issued a 1-ounce .9999 fine (24 Karat) legal tender $50 gold bullion coin based on the classic 1913 “buffalo nickel” designed by the world famous sculptor James Earle Fraser. You can view the design for the coin’s obverse and reverse below at left. The obverse features the classic profile of a Native American. The reverse features a majestic buffalo.coin face diameter thickness purity

1 Troy Oz $50.00 32.7mm 2.946mm .9999


Minimum Purchase
The minimum purchase of gold bullion coins is 5 ounces. If you are interested in purchasing less than 5 ounces, you can do so at our online store.

Market Value
Each American Buffalo price is based on the current market “spot price” plus a premium per coin. The spot price of gold (and all precious metals) is reported every business day in all major newspapers, network television and radio and online. 

 
Don’t miss out on this stunning re-release of a classic American icon in the purest investment-grade gold. The U.S. Mint has released the coin and it is now available for order. 

The Design
The 1913-1938 “Indian Head” nickel, with the buffalo reverse, is an essential bit of American nostalgia and history. Designed by the American master sculptor James Earle Fraser, it is just one of many enduring images he created. So popular is the Fraser “Indian Head” nickel that, prior to its selection as the U.S. Mint’s purest gold bullion coin, it was released by the U.S. Mint as a $1 uncirculated and proof silver coin in 2001. 

Three men — Chief Iron Tail, Chief Big Tree and Chief Two Moons — sat for Fraser as he designed the coin. The buffalo used by Fraser was a denizen of New York City’s Central Park Zoo.

Gold Uses

Gold is an ancient metal of wealth, commerce and beauty, but it also has a number of unique properties that make it invaluable to industy. These properties include:

• Resistance to corrosion 
• Electrical conductivity 
• Ductility and malleability 
• Infrared (heat) reflectivity 
• Thermal conductivity 

Gold’s superior electrical conductivity, malleability, and resistance to corrosion have made it vital to the manufacture of components used in a wide range of electronic products and equipment, including computers, telephones, cellular phones, and home appliances.

Gold has extraordinarily high reflective powers that are relied upon in the shielding that protects spacecrafts and satellites from solar radiation and in industrial and medical lasers that use gold-coated reflectors to focus light energy. And because gold is biologically inactive, it has become a vital tool for medical research and is even used in the direct treatment of arthritis and other intractable diseases.

The demand for gold in industry is steady and growing. The supply of gold from stored inventory and from mining operations is limited and will remain so. Demand from investors who want to posses this precious metal is steady, and increases during periods of world crises or instability. The result is a market with much more upside potential than down. 

Gold is an excellent hedge against inflation, and protects earnings for the future. Modern investors can invest in gold the traditional way — by purchasing gold bullion in the form of bars or coins — or they can trade in gold or gold futures electronically, or by investing in gold mining or refining companies.

Uses of Gold

It’s not surprising that most people think of gold as an expensive, luxurious metal. You only need to read about gold’s extraordinary history to see how that came to be. But gold has an alter-ego – as an incredibly versatile and useful material in science and technology. In fact, our ever-expanding use of technology has actually been a major factor in recent increases in the demand for gold

Gold Prospecting & Gold Mining


We are going to show you the basic ideas in order to learn where can be present the gold, how identify it and what alternatives exist for its extraction. In short, this site will show you everything you need to know to do prospecting. Although we'll explain to great extend the how to of searching for mineral deposits within ore veins, this guide considers the free gold ( Gold Placers of various types ) as the main source of this precious metal. Also learn how to invest in gold via our detailed guide. 

The mining extraction and metallurgy of gold has been pursued with great interest since it developed intrinsic value as a result of its properties, its decorative appeal and its scarcity. During much time gold has been the most attractive metal on the world, and still to this day is one the ones most fever and many developments and new ideas have appeared as a consequence of its huge value as an economic metal.

The gold-mining industry has grown considerably, and it appeared to the writer that the present would be a propitious time to bring out some guides in order to understand gold prospecting and gold mining. What has been goal of the site is to make "Prospecting for Gold" a compendium, in especially concrete form, of useful information respecting the processes of winning from the soil and the after- treatment of gold and gold ores, including some original suggestions. Practical information, original and selected, mining jobs are given to mining company directors, mine managers, mill operators, and prospectors. In each part, will be found a large number of useful hints on subjects directly and indirectly connected with the gold mining.

All the information should be very useful and surely is original, and each reader will be able to understand the difficult task of processing gold ores found in the veins that bear it. You'll learn the art of extracting valuable metals from gravel placers.

Here, you can learn about metal detecting as well as gold panning. You get to learn why gold placers will form where they form. You'll learn how to look and how to find gold placers (that's prospecting!) and analyze it.

Those unfamiliar with prospecting and mining will find a great Glossary of the Mining Trade's Terms. The characteristics of an ore deposit and its minerals assemblages (mineralization) determine mining methods, extraction process (recovery methods & equipment needed), and the performance of all chemical processes involved in gold extraction. Thus, a good knowledge of an ore is required to develop a gold extraction and the efficiency of the process.

The gold mineralogy can offer the following variations:
Gold occurrence, showings. 
Gold particle size and distribution. 
Type of gangue. 
Mineralogical association. 
Changes in mineral. 
Changes during the time.

Legend

Gold = Gold per troy ounce in US Dollars 
Gold Aussie $ = Gold per troy ounce in Australian Dollars 
Gold Canadian $ = Gold per troy ounce in Canadian Dollars 
Gold Hong Kong (oz)= Gold per troy ounce in Hong Kong Dollars 
Gold Hong Kong (Tael) 9999 = Gold per tael in Hong Kong Dollars 
Gold Rand = Gold per troy ounce in South African Rands 
Gold Ruble = Gold per troy ounce in Russian Roubles 
Gold Rupee = Gold per troy ounce in Indian Rupees 
Gold Rupee 100 Gram Bar 995 = Gold per 100 gram .995 fine bar in Indian Rupees 
Gold Sterling = Gold per troy ounce in UK, British Pounds Sterling, GBP, £ 
Gold Swiss F = Gold per troy ounce in Swiss Francs 
Gold Yen = Gold per troy ounce in Japanese Yen 
Gold Yen (Gram) = Gold per gram in Japanese Yen 
Gold Yuan (oz) = Gold per troy ounce in Chinese Yuan (Renminbi) 
Gold Yuan (Gram) = Gold per gram in Chinese Yuan (Renminbi) 
Gold Platinum Ratio = Ratio of gold price to platinum price (no units) 
Gold Silver Ratio = Ratio of gold price to silver price (no units

Spot Gold Price in 11 Major world Currencies

Gold Price per Ounce


Conversion : 1 troy ounce = 31.1034768 grams

The Early Gold Wars

The Congress shall have power ...to coin Money, regulate the Value thereof, and of foreign Coin, and fix the Standard of Weights and Measures." 
1787 - The Constitution of the United States - Section 8

That is precisely what the Congress did. In 1792, the Dollar was fixed by law at 24.75 grains or 0.05156 troy oz. of Gold. In 1837, the coinage was reworked and the Dollar was defined at 25.8 grains of Gold "nine-tenths fine". That gives 20.67 Dollars to one troy oz. of Gold. That was the Dollar's "fixed value" (see the quote above) for 96 years from 1837 to 1933.

Why Nuggets R Special?


Less than 2 percent of the world's gold remains in the form of nuggets. Gold nuggets are found worldwide - Australia, Africa, Russia, Bolivia and Canada. In the Continental United States nugget sources are primarily Alaska, California and Oregon. Only a handful of states industrially produce gold. Additionally, nuggets are becoming rarer and harder to find. Compared to diamonds, a 5 carat diamond is easier to find than a 1 ounce gold nugget. It is the individual prospector that is retrieving the gold nuggets and maintaining the tradition of past centuries. It is for this reason that the collector can still obtain gold nuggets in a variety of sizes, colors and textures. This is the unique distinction of nuggets and part of the mystery and romance of ownership.

Why Nuggets are Special

Less than 2 percent of the world's gold remains in the form of nuggets. Gold nuggets are found worldwide - Australia, Africa, Russia, Bolivia and Canada. In the Continental United States nugget sources are primarily Alaska, California and Oregon. Only a handful of states industrially produce gold. Additionally, nuggets are becoming rarer and harder to find. Compared to diamonds, a 5 carat diamond is easier to find than a 1 ounce gold nugget. It is the individual prospector that is retrieving the gold nuggets and maintaining the tradition of past centuries. It is for this reason that the collector can still obtain gold nuggets in a variety of sizes, colors and textures. This is the unique distinction of nuggets and part of the mystery and romance of ownership.

What is Gold?


Gold is a very popular precious metal. It has been used for centuries as a medium for money, trade, jewelry, and a store of value. Gold gained it's popularity from it's easy application. It is easy to work with and forms alloys with many other metals. It is also a popular metal for conductive mediums because it is a very good conductor of heat and electricity. It is also not affected by heat, moisture, oxygen, and most corrosive agents, making it a very long lived meta

A Brief History Of Gold


A child finds a shiny rock in a creek, thousands of years ago, and the human race is introduced to gold for the first time. 

Gold was first discovered as shining, yellow nuggets. "Gold is where you find it," so the saying goes, and gold was first discovered in its natural state, in streams all over the world. No doubt it was the first metal known to early hominids.

Gold became a part of every human culture. Its brilliance, natural beauty, and luster, and its great malleability and resistance to tarnish made it enjoyable to work and play with. 

Because gold is dispersed widely throughout the geologic world, its discovery occurred to many different groups in many different locales. And nearly everyone who found it was impressed with it, and so was the developing culture in which they lived. 

Gold was the first metal widely known to our species. When thinking about the historical progress of technology, we consider the development of iron and copper-working as the greatest contributions to our species' economic and cultural progress - but gold came first. 

Gold is the easiest of the metals to work. It occurs in a virtually pure and workable state, whereas most other metals tend to be found in ore-bodies that pose some difficulty in smelting. Gold's early uses were no doubtornamental, and its brilliance and permanence (it neither corrodes nor tarnishes) linked it to deities and royalty in early civilizations.

Gold has always been powerful stuff. The earliest history of human interaction with gold is long lost to us, but its association with the gods, with immortality, and with wealth itself are common to many cultures throughout the world. 

Early civilizations equated gold with gods and rulers, and gold was sought in their name and dedicated to their glorification. Humans almost intuitively place a high value on gold, equating it with power, beauty, and the cultural elite. And since gold is widely distributed all over the globe, we find this same thinking about gold throughout ancient and modern civilizations everywhere.

Gold, beauty, and power have always gone together. Gold in ancient times was made into shrines and idols ("the Golden Calf"), plates, cups, vases and vessels of all kinds, and of course, jewelry for personal adornment.

The "Gold of Troy" treasure hoard, excavated in Turkey and dating to the era 2450 -2600 B.C., show the range of gold-work from delicate jewelry to a gold gravy boat weighing a full troy pound. This was a time when gold was highly valued, but had not yet become money itself. Rather, it was owned by the powerful and well-connected, or made into objects of worship, or used to decorate sacred locations.

Gold has always had value to humans, even before it was money. This is demonstrated by the extraordinary efforts made to obtain it. Prospecting for gold was a worldwide effort going back thousands of years, even before the first money in the form of gold coins appeared about 700 B.C. 

In the quest for gold by the Phoenicians, Egyptians, Indians, Hittites, Chinese, and others, prisoners of war were sent to work the mines, as were slaves and criminals. And this happened during a time when gold had no value as 'money,' but was just considered a desirable commodity in and of itself.

The 'value' of gold was accepted all over the world. Today, as in ancient times, the intrinsic appeal of gold itself has that universal appeal to humans. But how did gold come to be a commodity, a measurable unit of value?

Gold, measured out, became money. Gold's beauty, scarcity, unique density (no other metal outside the platinum group is as heavy), and the ease by which it could be melted, formed, and measured made it a natural trading medium. Gold gave rise to the concept of money itself: portable, private, and permanent. Gold (and silver) in standardized coins came to replace barter arrangements, and made trade in the Classic period much easier.

Gold was money in ancient Greece. The Greeks mined for gold throughout the Mediterranean and Middle East regions by 550 B.C., and both Plato and Aristotle wrote about gold and had theories about its origins. Gold was associated with water (logical, since most of it was found in streams), and it was supposed that gold was a particularly dense combination of water and sunlight.

Their science may have been primitive, but the Greeks learned much about the practicalities of gold mining. By the time of the death of Alexander of Macedon (323 B.C.), the Greeks had mined gold from the Pillars of Hercules (Gibraltar) all the way eastward to Asia Minor and Egypt, and we find traces of their placer mines today. Some of the mines were owned by the state, some were worked privately with a royalty paid to the state. Also, nomads such as the Scythians and Cimmerians worked placer mines all over the region. The surviving Greek gold coinage and Scythian jewelry both show superb artistry.  

The Roman Empire furthered the quest for gold. The Romans mined gold extensively throughout their empire, and advanced the science of gold-mining considerably. They diverted streams of water to mine hydraulically, and built sluices and the first 'long toms.' They mined underground, also, and introduced water-wheels and the 'roasting' of gold-bearing ores to separate the gold from rock. They were able to more efficiently exploit old mine-sites, and of course their chief laborers were prisoners of war, slaves, and convicts.

A monetary standard made the world economy possible. The concept of money, (i.e., gold and silver in standard weight and fineness coins) allowed the World's economies to expand and prosper. During the Classic period of Greek and Roman rule in the western world, gold and silver both flowed to India for spices, and to China for silk. At the height of the Empire (A.D. 98-160), Roman gold and silver coins reigned from Britain to North Africa and Egypt.
Money had been invented. Its name was gold