The nugget was found by detectorist Richard Brock in the Shropshire Hills
Don't Miss
Most Read
Trending on GB News
A detectorist has, quite literally, struck gold after finding the biggest golden nugget ever found in England.
Richard Brock was on an organised expedition on farmland in the Shropshire Hills when he made the unique discovery.
The 67-year-old from Somerset, who has been detecting for over three decades, unearthed a 64.8-gram (about 2.28 ounces) golden nugget, nicknamed "Hiro's Nugget."
It is now set to fetch at least £30,000 at auction and is believed to be the biggest find of its kind under English soil.
The nugget found by Richard Brock
Mullock Jones Auctioneers
He said: "I have been detecting since 1989 and decided to join the trip as a similar previous one to Australia was cancelled during the pandemic. So I drove three-and-a-half hours to Shropshire and I actually arrived about an hour late, thinking I’d missed the action.
"At first, I just found a few rusty old tent pegs with this back-up detector that had a fading screen display. But after only 20 minutes of scanning the ground I found this nugget buried about five or six inches down in the ground.
“I was, perhaps, a bit too honest and started showing people, and then all of a sudden I had swarms of other detectorists scanning the same area. The machine I was using was pretty much kaput. It was only half working. It just goes to show that it doesn’t really matter what equipment you use.
"If you are walking over the find and are alert enough to what might be lurking underneath the soil, that makes all the difference.”
LATEST DEVELOPMENTS
The nugget is one of the largest ever found in England
Mullock Jones Auctioneers
It is unknown as to how the golden nugget ended up in the Shropshire hills near Much Wenlock. The area is an ancient landscape once under a prehistoric ocean and coral remnants have been found in the area.
There was also a large amount of rock that originally came from Wales, in which gold and copper were mined extensively during the Bronze Age.
It is believed that the discovery was made on a site believed to have been an old track or road with railway lines running through, containing stone possibly distributed from Wales.
Auctioneer Mullock Jones is offering the nugget for sale in a timed auction which began last weekend and runs until April 1. The nugget is estimated to sell for £30,000. Brock has confirmed he intends to split the proceeds of the auction with the land owner.
It is quite rare for a nugget of that size to be found in England, with previous bigger examples in Britain being found in either Wales and Scotland.
The Douglas Nugget found in Perthshire weighed 85.7g, another from the shores of Anglesey weighed 97.12g and The Reunion Nugget found in Scotland in 2019 weighed 121.3g.