Lasseter's
Reef
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Lasseter's
Reef refers to the purported discovery of a fabulously
rich gold deposit in a remote and desolate corner
of central Australia.
In 1929 and 1930 Harold Bell Lasseter claimed
that in 1897, as a young man, he had attempted
to walk from Alice Springs to the West Australian
goldfields, during which he stumbled across a
huge gold reef somewhere near the Northern Territory
- Western Australian border. He further claimed
that subsequent to this discovery he got into
difficulties and was fortuitously rescued by a
passing Afghan camel driver who took him to the
camp of a surveyor named Harding. Harding and
Lasseter were said to have later returned to the
reef in the attempt to fix its location, but failed
because their watches were inaccurate.
According to Lasseter, he then spent the next
three decades trying to raise sufficient interest
to fund an expedition into the interior. But at
the time the fortunes being made from the gold
rush at Kalgoorlie in Western Australia meant
that no-one was prepared to risk trekking into
the uncharted desert wilderness of central Australia,
even if the supposed discovery was as rich as
he claimed.
But by 1930, when Australia was in the grip of
the Great Depression, the attractions of such
desert gold were much greater, and Lasseter succeeded
in securing £50,000 of funding toward an
expedition to relocate the reef. Unusual for the
time, this expedition included motorised vehicular
transport and an aircraft. Accompanying Lasseter
were experienced bushmen Fred Blakeley and Fred
Colson, as well as a prospector, an engineer,
an explorer and a pilot.
The group endured great logistical difficulties
and physical hardships, and on reaching Mount
Marjorie (now Mount Leisler), Lasseter declared
that they were, in fact, 150 miles too far north.
Exasperated, Blakely declared Lasseter a charlatan,
and decided to end the expedition. The expedition
parted with Lasseter at Ilbilba; however, he insisted
on continuing onwards. Accompanied by a dingo-shooter
named Paul Johns, Lasseter, whose behaviour was
later reported as being increasingly erratic,
set off towards The Olgas. One afternoon Lasseter
returned to camp and announced that he had relocated
the gold reef, however he refused to reveal its
location. Johns, who by now doubted Lasseter's
sanity, accused him of being a liar, a fight ensued,
and Johns left Lasseter to his own devices. Lasseter
himself vanished into the desert sands.
A search for Lasseter was conducted by a bushman
named Bob Buck, and he succeeded in finding Lasseter's
body at Winter's Glen and, some way away, personal
effects in a cave at Hull's Creek; it later emerged
(from a "diary" found in the cave) that
after Johns left, Lasseter's camels had bolted,
leaving him alone in the desert without any means
of sustaining himself or returning to civilization.
He had then encountered a group of nomadic Aborigines,
who had rendered what assistance they could, but
a weakened and blinded Lasseter eventually succumbed
to malnutrition and exhaustion, having made a
belated attempt to walk from the Cave to Ayers
Rock (Uluru) or the Olgas (Kata Juta).
No maps showing the location of the fabled gold
reef were ever found, and over subsequent decades
the tale of the Reef and its discoverer has assumed
mythic proportions; it is perhaps the most famous
lost mine legend in Australia, and remains a holy
grail among Australian prospectors. (Credit: Wikipedia).
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