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Average share P50+: 1.5% Source: OzTAM 5 City Metro Consolidated 28 data, wks 1-38 2021, 7.30pm-12mn.
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Source: OzTAM 5 City Metro Consolidated 28 data, wks 1-38 2021, 5am-7.30pm | On average ABC TV Plus reaches 1.3 million Australians (7.5%) each week across the Five Capital Cities. Average share among total people is 5.1%. Share: ABC Kids channel has a share of 48.8% for children aged 0-4. ABC Kids is the #1 channel for preschool children aged 0-4 in Australia: Reach: ABC Kids channel reaches 58.5% of children aged 0-4 or 636,000 across the 5 Capital Cities.

READ MORE GOLD COMMUNITY, MEMBER AND TOURISM NEWS.2021 Ratings Share / Demo Performance: On average ABC Kids reaches 2.0 million Australians (11.5%) each week across the 5 Capital Cities.
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Įnjoy your own gold experience with the Heart of Gold Australia app, free to download from iTunes or Google Play.

Relive all the highlights from Griff’s trip down under on ABC iView. I used that to buy my first car, and it was a car that I could go out prospecting with,” Scott explained. “The first big nugget I had, I was a 16-year-old with my dad, and I found a four-and-a-half-ounce nugget. Upon Griff enquiring as to whether he thought the activity was fruitful, Scott confirms he’s enjoyed some luck. The episode ends with Griff trying his hand at prospecting with Amalgamated Prospectors and Leaseholders Association and Eastern Goldfields Historical Society President, Scott Wilson.
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KCGM haul truck driver Hannah Rout demonstrates how ore is transported to the crusher, a process that takes 30 minutes as the colossal vehicle works its way up from the bottom of the Pit. He finds a ‘metal dinosaur’ scooping 60 tonnes of raw earth at a time – part of a 24/7 load and haul operation. Griff then arrives at KCGM’s Super Pit gold mine to observe how much mining processes have changed in 125 years. To help the students train for the next international mining games, Griff joins in an exercise to shovel ore into a cart and push it to the end of a line. University mining students still train in traditional techniques and compete in teams up against the clock,” Griff discovers. Griff begins by meeting students at the Western Australian School of Mines (WASM) which was established 10 years after the region’s first gold discovery. Boarding the Indian Pacific in a Gold Class cabin, Griff begins his adventure in earnest – traveling to the State’s golden capital.ĭisembarking in Kalgoorlie, Griff realises the small town has a big history, luring a diverse mix of people and cultures to the outback since gold was first discovered in the region. “There’s a fighter plane in there, there’s the whole budget of a town in here, there’s row after row of houses in here! It’s just extraordinary to confront it,” Griff added.Īfter seeing the gold transformed into shiny 1kg bars, Griff decides to travel to where he can witness mining processes.
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“I’ve never seen so much portable wealth in once place!” he exclaimed.
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After the impurities are removed, he is left standing in front of containers full of gold, each worth approximately $2.5 million. Griff watches in awe as workers pour molten gold in a furnace at 1,100 degrees Celsius.

Griff concludes that to find a proper sandgroper, he should find someone digging for gold.īack in Perth, Griff arrives at the suburban fortress of The Perth Mint’s Refinery, to meet with Refinery General Manager Nathan Edwards. “We are proud, we own the name,” said Clinton.

He further explains a ‘sandgroper’ is a small insect and also a term to define people born in WA. Owner operator of Ngurrangga Tours, Clinton Walker is a descendant of the Ngarluma and Yindjibarndi people of the Western Pilbara and shows Griff images his ancestors left upon the red rock, illustrating their connection to the land. “The figures that surround this whole idea, boggle the brain,” he said.ĭeciding there must be more to the land than its mineral wealth, Griff engages a local Aboriginal guide to discover the sacred cultural significance the region also holds for Indigenous people. In the first episode, Perth to Kalgoorlie: Find a Sandgroper, Griff explores Western Australia’s earthly riches.Īrriving in WA, Griff travels to Karratha in the Pilbara, a mining region encompassing 2.5 million square kilometers of red earth bursting with mineral wealth, and discovers an automated iron ore train.Īt $1.3 billion and operated by technicians 1,500 kilometers away in Perth, the enormous train represents the first pit-to-port operation in the world, taking Griff completely by surprise. The six-part documentary series, Griff’s Great Australian Rail Trip, sees the Welsh-born comedian, writer and actor visit large cities and tiny communities whilst travelling across the expansive outback from Perth to Sydney.
