China hits third 1,000-tonne gold belt this year that holds ‘all treasures’
Engineers believe the new discoveries suggest Chinese gold reserves could be much larger than previously thought

Initial estimates suggest its total gold reserves could exceed 1,000 tonnes.
“The outline of a thousand-tonne-scale gold belt in West Kunlun, Xinjiang, is now taking shape,” wrote He Fubao, a senior engineer with the Kashgar Geological Team, and his colleagues in a paper published on November 4 in the peer-reviewed journal Acta Geoscientica Sinica.
Before these announcements, the world’s largest known gold deposits typically held only a few hundred tonnes. The industry had estimated that only about 3,000 tonnes of gold remained unmined in China, just a quarter of the remaining untapped gold in Russia and Australia.
The rapid succession of these new discoveries suggests China’s gold reserves could be much bigger than previously thought.