On August 16, 1896, two prospectors had their hopes literally pan out when they found a huge deposit of gold along the banks of the Yukon River in Canada’s Klondike region. And with that, Skookum Jim Mason (aka Keish) and his American brother-in-law George Carmack set in motion the Klondike Gold Rush—the richest gold strike in North American history. Because of the remoteness of the find, it would be over 11 months before the rest of the world found out. And it did so in the most dramatic fashion, when the steamers Portland and Excelsior pulled into the harbors of Seattle and San Francisco respectively carrying over one ton of gold (worth more than $1 billion in today"s dollars).
Shining like Klondike gold
Today in History
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North Cascades National Park at 50
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Martinique
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World Environment Day
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A state-of-the-art lookout on the Rock of Gibraltar
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European fallow deer in England
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Wychwood Forest, Oxfordshire, England
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FOR FOREST by Klaus Littmann
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Does this chameleon look a little insecure?
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Barn owl, England
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Welcome to Scotland s garden
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A cutting-edge art gallery opens in Paris
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Protecting Alaska
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The citadel in Bonifacio, Southern Corsica, France
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Class, please take out a No. 2 pencil…
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

