1. There was a man, Mansa Musa, one of the wealthiest person in history, who spent so much gold personally in Egypt that he devalued gold and destroyed the country’s economy. – Source
2. 1 ton of discarded cell phones will yield more gold than 1 ton of gold ore. – Source
3. Chinese prisoners are forced to farm World of Warcraft gold. There are thought to be 100,000 full-time gold farmers in the country. – Source
4. The Olympic games used to include gold medals in categories such as architecture, city planning, sculpturing and statistics. The founder of modern Olympics, Pierre de Coubertin, himself won the gold medal in literature at the 1912 summer olympics. – Source
5. In 1955, someone dropped a >600 year old plaster Buddha statue in Bangkok, Thailand to discover the plaster was actually covering a solid gold statue. – Source
6. Wladimir Klitschko auctioned off his 1996 Olympic gold medal in March 2012 for charity. The buyer paid $1 million, but immediately returned it because he wanted it to stay in the family. – Source
7. If we extract all the gold out of the ocean, there would be enough for everyone to have 9 pounds of gold. – Source
8. Canada has a $300 Gold Coin with a Narwhal on it – Source
9. Mr. T stopped wearing gold chains in 2005 because he thought it would be an insult to the people who lost everything after Hurricane Katrina – Source
10. Aluminum used to be one of the most expensive metals in the world. Only the wealthiest ate with aluminum utensils, while lesser nobility ate with gold. – Source
11. Neil Degrasse Tyson won a gold medal in 1985 for Latin ballroom dancing. – Source
12. Hungarian chemist George de Hevesy dissolved the gold Nobel Prizes of German physicists Max von Laue (1914) and James Franck (1925) to prevent the Nazis from confiscating them. After the war the gold was re-cast into medals and again presented to Laue and Franck. – Source
13. Gaius gracchus, the ancient roman politician, had a bounty put on his head to the price of the head’s weight in gold. Although the head was delivered, the prize was never paid, as it was discovered that Gaius’ captor had emptied out his brain and replaced it with molten lead. – Source
14. Ice cream testers use gold spoons to be able to taste the product 100% without a slight percentage of ‘after-taste’ from typical spoons. – Source
15. It was common for sailors to wear gold earrings so that in the event of their death and the body washing up on shore, the earring would serve as payment for a “proper Christian burial”. – Source
16. In 1859, the aurora was so bright that gold miners in the Rocky Mountains woke up and ate breakfast at 1 a.m., thinking the sun had risen on a cloudy day. – Source
17. Olympic Gold is only 1% Gold. – Source
18. In 1992, a man looking for his hammer with a metal detector found one of the largest hoards of Roman gold and silver ever found in Britain – Source
19. It is believed that there’s enough gold in Earth’s core to coat its surface in 1.5 feet. – Source
20. There are ATMs in Dubai that dispense gold bars – Source
21. Indian citizens buy so much gold that the Indian government owns only 360 metric tons, while private gold holdings are estimated to be 15,000 metric tons and gold purchases have widened the country’s current fiscal deficit to 5.4% of GDP – Source
22. Lego used to give long serving employees a solid gold brick of 25.65 g for 25 years of service – Source
23. There were seven fabled cities of gold, not just El Dorado – Source
24. Most of the gold that is present today in the Earth’s crust and mantle was delivered to Earth by asteroid impacts – Source
25. The vast majority of Earth’s gold and platinum is found in its core. The reason these elements are so rare on the surface is because they mostly sunk to the core when the planet was molten. – Source
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