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California winter rainfall sparks renewed gold rush: reports

Record rainfall and recent wildfires in California have loosened up soil and rocks in such a way that gold seekers are chomping at the bit to pan for gold.

With the record rainfall over the winter and wildfires of recent years, treasure hunters are again combing the loosened rocks and soil of California for gold, according to reports.

The original Gold Rush occurred about 175 years ago, but hopeful prospectors see the recent weather as a fortunate circumstance that may help pan out their search for gold around Sacramento and Placerville.

As massive snowpack built up during the winter storms in the Sierra Nevada mountains begin to melt with the warmer weather, the rushing water pushes gold in the mountains down into the rivers, The New York Times reported Saturday.

"Anytime you can stand next to a river, and you hear the boulders tumbling, you know the gold is moving, too," Jim Eakin, owner of a firewood business in Placerville and amateur gold seeker, told the newspaper.

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Ed Allen, historian of the Marshall Gold Discovery State Park in Coloma, told KCRA in February that he is always keeping an eye out for gold, especially since the record rain and snowfall this winter.

"We just had a flood here last month and that brought down gold," Ed Allen said at the time. "People are still looking for gold. We've only found 10-15% of the gold in California."

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Several gold seekers recounted stories of treasure hunting to the outlets, from discovering a gold nugget worth enough cash to buy a pickup truck to panning less than 2 grams of gold worth $80. 

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Some gold seekers told the Times that they predict more gold will be found as the river levels recede, allowing better access to the rocks and sandbars.

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