Alluvial vs Hard Rock: Which Equipment?

Published January 23, 2026 · Gold Wash Plants

Understanding the Two Types of Gold Mining

A mining company in Mozambique recently asked us a crucial question: "We found gold in both the river gravels and in the quartz veins in the hills. What equipment do we need?" This perfectly illustrates the fundamental decision in gold mining — alluvial (placer) vs hard rock mining. Each requires different equipment, different costs, and different approaches.

What is Alluvial Gold Mining?

Alluvial gold mining (also called placer mining) recovers gold that has already been liberated from host rock by natural weathering and erosion. This gold is found in:

Key characteristic: The gold is already "free" — liberated from the host rock and mixed with sand, gravel, and other sediments.

What is Hard Rock Gold Mining?

Hard rock mining (also called lode mining) extracts gold that's still locked in its host rock. The gold is typically found in:

Key characteristic: The gold is "locked" in rock and must be liberated through crushing and grinding before recovery.

Equipment Needs: Alluvial vs Hard Rock

Mining Type Primary Equipment Processing Steps Complexity
Alluvial/Placer Wash Plant Only Screen → Wash → Capture Simple
Hard Rock Crusher + Wash Plant Crush → Grind → Screen → Wash → Capture Complex

Alluvial Gold Equipment: Wash Plants

For alluvial deposits, a gold wash plant is typically all you need:

Equipment components:

Why wash plants work for alluvial:

Popular alluvial models:

Hard Rock Gold Equipment: Crushers + Wash Plants

Hard rock mining requires crushing equipment before the wash plant:

Stage 1: Primary Crushing

Stage 2: Secondary Crushing/Grinding

Stage 3: Washing and Recovery

Cost Comparison: Alluvial vs Hard Rock

Alluvial Mining Costs (M100 example):

Hard Rock Mining Costs (equivalent capacity):

Result: Hard rock mining typically costs 2-3x more for equipment alone.

Operating Cost Differences

Alluvial Operating Costs:

Hard Rock Operating Costs:

Regional Examples and Considerations

Mozambique (Alluvial Focus):

Ecuador (Mixed Deposits):

Papua New Guinea (Hard Rock Dominant):

Which Type of Deposit Do You Have?

Signs of Alluvial Deposits:

Signs of Hard Rock Deposits:

Hybrid Operations: Best of Both

Some operations successfully combine both approaches:

Environmental and Permitting Considerations

Alluvial mining typically has:

Hard rock mining often requires:

Making Your Decision

Choose alluvial equipment if:

Choose hard rock equipment if:

Not sure which type of deposit you have? Call Chase at (888) 868-2650 to discuss your findings. We can help you determine whether you need a wash plant only, or crushing equipment plus wash plant, based on your specific deposit characteristics.

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