Goldfields (Victoria)
{{Short description|Region of Victoria, Australia}}
{{for|historical information|Victorian gold rush}}
{{use dmy dates|date=July 2019}}
{{use Australian English|date=July 2019}}
Image:Nerrena Fossickers in the Creek Nerrena.jpg
The Goldfields region of Victoria is a region commonly used but typically defined in both historical geography and tourism geography (in particular heritage tourism).{{cite web|url=http://www.goldfields.org.au/|title=Goldfields of Victoria|publisher=Goldfields Tourism Incorporated|access-date=17 December 2016| archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20120317041650/http://www.goldfields.org.au/| archive-date=March 17, 2012 |url-status=dead}} The region is also known as the Victorian Golden Triangle.{{cite web |url= https://www.goldfieldsguide.com.au/blog/94/where-to-look-for-gold-in-victorias-golden-triangle |title= Places to Find Gold in Victoria's Golden Triangle |date= 23 June 2020 |publisher= Goldfields Guide .com.au }}
==Description==
File:Aerial panorama of Blue Waters lake in Creswick.png
It takes in a specific area of North Central Victoria, the major cities of Ballarat and Bendigo as well as smaller centres including Daylesford, Castlemaine and Maryborough. It extends as far north as Inglewood and St Arnaud. It encroaches on the Western District near Ararat. Other significant towns include Maldon, Creswick, Clunes, Avoca and Buninyong.
Although the region has a strong association with the Victorian gold rush there are, however, significant towns associated with the gold rush and gold mining located outside of this region - notable examples include Warburton, Walhalla, Warrandyte, Chiltern and Beechworth. The goldfields region is more strongly linked to the impact of the Victorian Gold Rush than the discovery of gold in Victoria.
As a result of the gold rush, the region contains many old buildings, including celebrated examples of Victorian architecture, some of which are heritage listed, while others have fallen into disrepair and become derelict. Many of the towns were far larger during the Gold Rush than they are now, and there are some examples of ghost towns in the region. Major tourism icons include Sovereign Hill, Eureka Stockade site and the Bendigo Talking Tram. The region is also associated with the origins of Australian rules football; Tom Wills, one of the game's founders, grew up outside present-day Moyston, the self-proclaimed "Birthplace of Australian Football". Some of the earliest clubs were also established in the region.
File:Aerial perspective of St Georges Lake in Creswick.jpg
Demographically, the population of the region was approximately 244,900 in 2006.Victorian Population Bulletin 2006, Dept. of Sustainability & Environment The region has a well-defined road tourist route. The area retains a significant gold mining industry and remains a popular for fossicking.
The Goldfields region is also associated as a wine growing region with a large number of established vineyards and popular wineries. An important ecosystem associated with the region is the Box-Ironbark forest, now much fragmented and cleared but still important for the conservation of many birds and other animals.
See also
Gallery
File:Ballarat lydiard sturt.jpg|Corner Sturt and Lydiard Streets, Ballarat
File:Bendigo talking tram.jpg|Pall Mall, Bendigo, with Talking Tram
File:Sovereign Hill - Main St S from Golden Point Rd 2.jpg|Sovereign Hill open-air museum, a large tourist attraction in Ballarat
File:MaldonStreetscape.JPG|Maldon's famous historic streetscapes
File:Sluicing-the-lerderderg.jpg|Sluicing in the Lerderderg Gorge, between Blackwood and Bacchus Marsh
File:Bendigo diggings gold mine c 1857.png|Bendigo diggings gold mine in c.1857 - Bendigo, Victoria, Australia
File:Group of diggers.jpg|Richard Daintree and Antoine Fauchery (circa 1858) A gang of diggers at Forrest Creek, Chewton
File:Old Post Office Hill, Forest Creek.jpg|Richard Daintree, Castlemaine gold diggings on 15 January 1858, Forrest Creek
File:FL15629727.jpg|Daintree, Richard, (1858) Great Eastern Tunnel, 1500 feet long, Jim Crow diggings, Daylesford
File:Chinese Encampment Guildford.jpg|Richard Daintree (c.1858) Chinese gold mining encampment at Guildford
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- [https://www.goldfieldsguide.com.au/, Goldfields Guide]
- [http://www.visitvictoria.com/Regions/Goldfields.aspx Goldfields, Victoria] at Visit Victoria
{{coord missing|Victoria (state)}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Goldfields Region Of Victoria}}
Category:Regions of Victoria (state)