Disappearing Dutch Gold Mine

Gone Dutchman Gold Mine

There is a gold mine in Superstition Mountain, Arizona, if you hit the wall with a hammer Open, there will be piles of natural gold rolling down. The gold mine was originally discovered by a race of Indians and kept as a secret. The secret was not revealed until a monk from Mexico came to Arizona. The reason why it is called “the gold mine of the Dutch” is because many explorers who are believed to be from the Netherlands came here in the 19th century, and two of them were actually German explorers Jacob Watts, Jacob Weiser, who rescued Don Miguel Perlatta during a fight in a small Mexican town, in return Don Miguel Perlatta told the two explorers about a family The secret of the gold mine, and then the three found the gold mine according to the map of the Perata family, and the three got gold worth 20,000 US dollars.

Later then sold the map and the gold mine for half of the gold mine’s proceeds. The two Germans continued to work in the gold mines for the next 20 years, but disaster eventually struck. When Watts returned to camp one night, Weatherser was gone, with only the blood coat and Indian arrows on the ground.

In 1880, the gold mine was once again discovered by two young American soldiers who filled their backpacks with gold, but never came back when they went a second time , and an investigative team was sent over to investigate, and they found that two soldiers had been shot dead. Afterwards, stories of gold mines were circulated and polished. The area is now a national park, Lost Dutchman National Park, and mining is banned, but that doesn’t stop the 8,000 people who go there every year in search of gold.