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00:11The Australian Outback.
00:15Vast.
00:18Remote.
00:21Hostile.
00:25For two men, this is the backdrop to a lifelong obsession.
00:31This is what we do. This is who we are.
00:34A childhood pact.
00:38To solve a 100-year-old mystery.
00:42We've been called eccentric and all sorts of different things.
00:46Finding Australia's El Dorado.
00:49A lost fortune in gold.
00:56Clues from one man hold the key.
00:59I think he did find it and he actually wanted somebody else to find it as well.
01:06In 1897, Harold Lasseter staggered out of the desert.
01:14Claiming to have discovered a massive outcrop of gold, known as a reef, worth billions.
01:22Decades later, while on an expedition to rediscover his fortune, Lasseter perished.
01:30Taking to the grave the secret location of his gold.
01:37Now, a new expedition is out.
01:41To discover the truth.
01:43Coming in real fast, eh?
01:46Survive the Outback.
01:48Snake, snake.
01:48Big for hell.
01:50Oh, whoa.
01:50And just maybe, become billionaires in the process.
01:55Look at that.
01:55Bad income, check this out.
01:57We found gold.
01:58Yes!
01:59We found gold.
02:06Yes!
02:09Last time, the team began their quest.
02:13Your life is at risk going out.
02:14It's dangerous.
02:16Confronting the same threats faced by the 1930 expedition.
02:21It's that kernel of truth that I think is interesting.
02:24Tanya discovered that a bold claim from Lasseter actually stacked up.
02:29Looks remarkably similar to the bridge that exists today.
02:32So, goodness me.
02:33And a chance find from Andrew.
02:36Oh, my Lord.
02:38A sign they're on the right track.
02:41We've been doing this so long.
02:43Oh, no way.
02:44Yeah.
02:45Our first day out.
02:47We've got relics.
03:04I've got a decent sized huntsman spider here.
03:06Look at this.
03:07I just folded up my swag and he was crawling down my shoulder.
03:12They don't tend to bite usually.
03:15They're normally pretty friendly.
03:19Two hundred kilometres west of Alice Springs, lifelong friends Brendan Elliot and Geoff Harris along with geologist Andrew Bales are
03:30four days into a hunt for a lost fortune and a lost legend.
03:38No, it's not about finding billions of dollars or running off with a whole handful of cash or gold.
03:43It's never been about the money.
03:45It's just to show the world that Lasseter was actually telling the truth.
03:55The team are following the path of Harry Lasseter's ill-fated 1930 expedition.
04:04After leaving Alice Springs, they still have 250 kilometres to go to reach his base camp at Il Pili.
04:14Along the trail, they're hunting for traces of the infamous prospector, as well as anything pointing to the existence of
04:23his gold.
04:24We need a couple more clues and we don't know what they are until we stumble across them.
04:30Could be a tin with one piece of paper in it that gives you that little bit of extra information.
04:34He left a lot of the secrets around buried under campfires.
04:37He left messages.
04:39Metal detectors.
04:41It's interesting studying the Macdonald Ranges.
04:45It's not renowned in the western reaches to have gold occurrences full stop.
04:51I don't care.
04:52I want to see it myself and I'll study it and I can read the ground very easily and quickly
04:56say we're in a really good location.
04:58So there's always a chance.
05:03Meanwhile, in the archives, historian Tanya Evans is following Lasseter's paper trail, investigating whether the enigmatic Lasseter should even be
05:14believed.
05:17I find Lasseter really interesting.
05:19He's a man of mystery.
05:20He's a man of tall stories.
05:22He's a man of enormous ambition.
05:24But I look forward to digging up more about this particular story because I think this is going to be
05:29really important for trying to establish whether Lasseter was a man who told the truth.
05:44What's the fuel situation?
05:45We're well under half so it's a good time to get some fuel right now and meet up aloud.
05:50The expedition covers a total area of 130,000 square kilometres.
05:58Out here, there are no petrol stations.
06:03Planned fuel drops are essential.
06:07Respected local guide and Arenda man, Leo Abbott, is due to rendezvous with the team.
06:15I'm just looking at those coordinates, guys.
06:17We're not far off the location that we're going to meet Leo.
06:20There'll be an intersection you've got to look for.
06:25Oh yeah, this'll be it.
06:28Leo's not here.
06:31No.
06:40Just wait here and wait for him.
06:45Got a bit of dust coming.
06:46Oh, here we go.
06:49Beautiful.
06:50He's hooking along.
06:51He loves it.
06:58We are pleased to see you, mate, I can tell you.
07:01Oh.
07:01We're starting to worry.
07:02What's going on?
07:03I don't know.
07:03I thought you must have been having a coffee somewhere.
07:05I was, yeah.
07:06Were you?
07:07I was thinking, nah, they can wait a little bit more longer.
07:09Mate.
07:10I've got to enjoy this cappuccino.
07:12As long as he got here, eh?
07:13That's right.
07:14I'm here.
07:20We'll fuel it up now.
07:22Too easy.
07:26You ready?
07:27Yeah, mate.
07:27Rocket on.
07:30Oh, we're flowing.
07:31Beauty.
07:33So, how have you fellas been going?
07:35We've got a couple of objects there we want to show you.
07:37Yeah, yeah.
07:37All right.
07:38I didn't expect to be finding what we've been getting, so it's great.
07:44For nearly 100 years, dozens of expeditions have been through this land, hunting for Lasseter's
07:51lost fortune in gold.
07:55Leo has seen many of them try and fail.
08:00Well, these are some of the fires we've got here, Leo.
08:02Here we go.
08:04We found, which was a real, absolute, well, I was, you know, shocked.
08:09It was a general find, wasn't it?
08:10It was.
08:10We found this penny, dated 1928.
08:15Could be from the Lasseter expedition.
08:19Timing's about right.
08:20Timing's about right, yeah.
08:21Could be.
08:23Just from talking to some of the old people, they've had sort of different theories about
08:27it.
08:27Was he just getting away from troubles?
08:30Or was he just the world's best con man, you know?
08:34Him coming out here for a big find and all this sort of stuff.
08:38Well, nobody's found him.
08:40Not yet.
08:45No worries.
08:47No worries.
08:47Thanks a lot for that.
08:48No worries.
09:09No worries.
09:10Sometimes I feel a lot less though.
09:13No one believed him.
09:15No one believes us.
09:18We've been called crazy.
09:20You're nuts.
09:20It doesn't exist.
09:25It's difficult.
09:31Hey, check out that.
09:33Look at that.
09:34How beautiful is that?
09:39Well, it's interesting.
09:40I just had a look at my phone before on the geology.
09:42We're cross cutting from north to south through these gaps in the range.
09:48And there's only a couple of places through the range that you can pass.
09:52I mean, when you think about it.
09:53They must have had to come through this way.
09:55Yeah, yeah, yeah.
09:57Hey, hold on bro.
09:58Check it out.
10:00Now this looks like a place where Lasseter said he wants camping.
10:03Do you want to stop and have a look?
10:04Yeah, I can have a bit of a squeeze.
10:15This looks like a bit of a cave, is it?
10:17Yeah.
10:22At the same point on the 1930 expedition, friction between Lasseter and the team leader,
10:29Fred Blakely, was intensifying.
10:32Blakely was beginning to doubt Lasseter and the story of his gold.
10:38When Lasseter noticed a cave high up on a rock face,
10:42he told Blakely he'd camped there 33 years before, aged 17,
10:49when he first found his gold.
10:53Blakely scoffed at the idea.
10:57Why would have gone up there?
10:58Well, I'm looking at it myself.
11:01And if I was 17 years old, riding horse through this country on me own,
11:06if it was me, I'd want to hide up high and have a good view,
11:11considering that's the only cave we've located since we've been on the track.
11:15There's a good chance that was a cave.
11:18I'd camp in that.
11:20Up there?
11:21Yeah, I'd get up there.
11:22Why would you get up that high?
11:23Oh, for a night?
11:24You don't want anyone in their right mind to just climb up there for a night.
11:27You reckon you'd get up there?
11:28Why, if I would.
11:29Come on, bro, you're not as fit as you used to be.
11:31I'll get up there, mate.
11:33Bet you a dollar you don't make it.
11:35You're wrong.
11:36Rightio.
11:37You got the dollar?
11:38I've got a dollar.
11:39There you go.
11:41One Australian dollar.
11:43You got the old time.
11:44Of course.
11:45I bet with this all the time and I'll always win it back at some stage.
11:48Well, I'll come on with you.
11:50See you on your own, OK?
11:51Yeah.
11:51What are you going to do?
11:52I'm going to take a bit of a keeper.
11:53I'll keep the radio on.
11:54And I'll listen to our fears calling me.
11:57All right, all right.
11:57Good, good.
11:59Reach the cave.
12:00And for Geoff, it will reinforce his belief in Lasseter.
12:07The point is, one, that you could get up there.
12:09Because that was one of Blakely's statesman's.
12:11He says there's no way you climb up that height.
12:13So I want to see if we actually can get up into that cave.
12:17And let's just say Lasseter did roll up there when he was 17.
12:21Who's to say he didn't put his name on the wall?
12:23Or even leave something behind?
12:26Well, we're going to take the ladder up there.
12:27Because I don't want to come back down.
12:29I want to get in.
12:30You ready?
12:32I think we're right.
12:33Let's do it.
12:34Good luck, boys.
12:43Which way?
12:45Well...
12:45Straight up there.
12:46Yeah, yeah.
12:47Let's do it.
12:49On the hunt for a multi-billion dollar gold reef, Geoff and Andrew are attempting to reach
12:55a cave that prospector Harry Lasseter may have camped in.
13:03Watch yourself.
13:05And if we can find one clue to get us closer to the reef, you know, if we can find
13:10another
13:10bit of evidence like a tin can with something written in it, it just might point us in that
13:15right direction.
13:18Midday, and the temperature is well over 40 degrees.
13:22I mean, jeez, isn't it hot?
13:25Made worse by heat radiating off the rocks.
13:29It's like inside an oven.
13:30A blast furnace.
13:31You're getting it straight up from below.
13:34But it's cooking.
13:41Go around here, on the left.
13:44You're going to go to the left?
13:44Yeah, there's a flat piece of heat we can walk up on.
13:48Oh.
13:51Well, that's it, brother.
13:53It's like stepping stones all the way up.
13:56The distance from below to here didn't take long.
13:59Nah.
14:00So that just puts what Blakely said to Lasseter about that being too high out to climb.
14:04Yeah.
14:04Now I'm starting to think a little differently about it.
14:06We should get out there and have a look.
14:16You got it?
14:16Yeah, could you take your time?
14:18Yeah.
14:32Oh, whoa.
14:42You got a copy up there, Jeff?
14:46Copy Andrew?
14:54they did say they'd keep that radio on at all times
14:58they might have lost radio contact inside the cave or something
15:01it's a bit concerning but
15:06a lot of things can go wrong in a cave
15:08copy Jeff or Andrew
15:10yeah there mate
15:16it's different
15:18it's much bigger than I thought it was going to be
15:20a lot bigger
15:21a bit of scat lying around
15:24well there's definitely I reckon bats in here
15:25I don't know about that
15:27I'm just keen to see if there's any human activity
15:30see if a tin's been left behind or something
15:32yeah
15:39that rock there is out of place
15:42oh yeah
15:43you see that
15:43oh I didn't know I'd put a rock there though
15:45don't know there's nothing else in here that's of that colour
15:49this is something that's been brought into this cave
15:51it hasn't come from the cave right
15:53did Lasseter ever leave rock things behind
15:57not that I know of
15:58I know it used to mark trees
16:00so is that a sign that there's something buried here
16:03I suppose if you run the gold detector over and see what you come across
16:07it's worth it
16:14well I'm going right in around here really close to this marker
16:19you're getting hit are you
16:20no if it's metal it'll really see
16:23yeah
16:24oh wow
16:34a small metal detector known as a pinpointer helps find the exact location of the signal
16:41It's giving a little something going on and it's giving a false signal I think, unfortunately.
16:51That's alright, we had a look.
16:53We had a try man.
16:54But the point is, it's big enough to camp in and it's not hard to get up here.
17:03Copy Geoff or Andrew, you there mate?
17:07Yeah I got a copy.
17:09Oh you there, I was starting to get worried mate, you weren't answering.
17:12Put your pants on mate, we could hear you snoring from up here.
17:16You guys are all good up there?
17:18Yeah, all good brother.
17:19There you go.
17:21Love you.
17:26How'd it go?
17:27A lot bigger than you think.
17:30Detector, gritted the whole cave.
17:31Yep.
17:32Not as scary.
17:33So at least we can cross that off.
17:35There was something there from Lasseter.
17:36I think we would have found it.
17:37Yeah.
17:37Well I guess I owe you a dollar.
17:39You owe me a dollar brother.
17:40I owe you a dollar.
17:41There you go.
17:42Well I'll hang on to that my friend.
17:43Yeah no worries, I'll win it back at some stage, I'll tell you.
17:45Let's go.
17:48While no clues have been found, Lasseter's story of camping here is highly possible.
17:55Reinforcing the team's belief that they're on the right track.
18:06Over 2,000 kilometres away, historian Tanya is continuing her own investigation into Lasseter.
18:17Lasseter strikes me as a really complicated individual.
18:20I haven't worked him out yet.
18:22I don't think we have the evidence to quite work him out yet.
18:25It's been important to try and piece together whether he was telling the truth, obviously
18:33for discovering the reef full of gold, but also to test his claim about designing the
18:39Harbour Bridge.
18:42So far, Tanya has found that Lasseter's extraordinary claim to being the original designer of the
18:50Sydney Harbour Bridge may have been true.
18:54And there is his drawing of the Harbour Bridge.
18:59Wow.
19:03But now she's uncovered a magazine containing an anonymous letter to the editor that casts
19:10doubt on Lasseter's character.
19:13It's an account that's been published in the Bulletin in March 1932, so after Lasseter's death.
19:21So we have here an account by somebody who calls himself Virax, which means to tell the truth.
19:28So, Virax.
19:30I haven't much faith in Lasseter's reef.
19:32I knew Lasseter.
19:34He claimed to be a Victorian by birth, but had spent many years in the USA.
19:39He used to write for a local newspaper, but one of his contributions being a bitter denunciation
19:45of the war in verse.
19:47Oh goodness, he writes poetry as well.
19:49He told me he had invented a device to make battleships torpedo proof, but the naval authorities
19:55were not impressed by it.
19:57In short, Virax suggests, he was more or less of a crank.
20:03Very aggressive, very self-opinionated, and full of large, hopeful visions.
20:09I fear his reef was only one of the many illusions and delusions that spattered his career.
20:17The more documentary evidence we gather about Lasseter, the more complicated and contradictory he becomes.
20:26So, you know, you think you find a piece of evidence that provides an answer, and then another piece of
20:31evidence just throws that out of the window.
20:36It's really hard to find the truth, and all historians don't think in terms of black and white.
20:41People try and alter the story of themselves, not just Lasseter, but other people as well.
20:47In fact, almost everyone plays with different versions of themselves, and that's why it's hard to find the truth.
21:00Back in the field, the team pushed through ancient mountain ranges on constant watch for landmarks that Lasseter said lay
21:09close to his gold reef.
21:13Three hills in the shape of women wearing sun bonnets, and there was another hill that he actually said that
21:19looked like a quaker's hat with the top cut off.
21:22And that's when he stumbled across the reef, and that's where he found the gold.
21:27Hang on, mate. Just pull up. Hang on. Hang on. No, seriously.
21:30Let's go.
21:31Just pull up here for a second. There's something I want to look at out here. This looks interesting.
21:43This looks interesting. Really interesting.
21:47A pile of rocks has caught geologist Andrew's eye.
21:52This one's a nice piece of quartz. This is what's really exciting coming to an area like this.
21:58Quartz is like a carrier fluid for the gold.
22:02He's spotted what could be a much smaller version of Lasseter's quartz outcrop, or reef.
22:09Could this be similar to what Lasseter found? Possibly.
22:13Lasseter claimed that his gold lay embedded in a quartz reef, 14 miles long and up to 12 feet wide.
22:22Quartz is just a really nice sign of where gold likes to be.
22:26This is a very white, bucky-looking quartz.
22:29What does bucky mean?
22:30Very little mineralisation and limited potential for gold.
22:33However, I've found gold in fairly bucky-white quartz before.
22:37Yeah, right.
22:38So I don't discount it.
22:3990%, 80% of the time, the more mongery the quartz looks, the more iron-stained, broken, brittle, mouse-ridden.
22:47Mouse-ridden like it's...
22:48Little pockets. It looks like a bit of cheese.
22:51Oh, yeah. Oh, like it's been chewed out or something.
22:53Yeah, chewed out.
22:53Yep.
22:53Is that where the gold sits in those fractures?
22:56That's right.
22:56That's right.
22:57Gold likes space.
22:59So where there's fractures and joints, that's where the gold likes to be.
23:04Is this something we're looking for when we're looking for Lasseter's Reef?
23:06Absolutely.
23:07The strong theory back in the day was that the country out here didn't hold gold and hence
23:12there was a lot of controversy and doubt on Lasseter's part that there was gold out here.
23:18Gold and quartz are often found together, forming under similar geological conditions.
23:27Deep in the earth, water, heated by magma, is forced up through rock, dissolving gold.
23:36As the fluid cools or changes pressure, gold can crystallise with quartz, forming gold-bearing quartz reefs.
23:49Quartz veins, they pinch and swell.
23:52It's like a big sausage.
23:54Yep.
23:54It has a narrow point and then it blows out again.
23:57That's one of the clues with Lasseter's Reef.
23:59Went along above the ground and then went down underground.
24:04Yes.
24:04Down the track a bit, it'll come back up again.
24:06And I'm not saying this is Lasseter's Reef, but it can happen.
24:09Absolutely.
24:10How come it hasn't been found today?
24:12Yeah.
24:12Just for that reason.
24:13Yeah.
24:15Yeah.
24:17So how would you work out if it's a gold-bearing line of quartz?
24:23So we'll collect maybe half a dozen pieces, crush these up and pan it.
24:32Yeah, that's nice.
24:33Potential.
24:40So this tool here is a very basic rock crusher for us.
24:45It's called a dolly pot, an old term.
24:48It's like a mortar and pestle really.
24:51I'm going to break it down.
24:53If there's a sniff of gold, any of this it should show up.
24:56The chances of finding gold is slim.
25:00To find any gold in the quartz, first it needs to be shattered.
25:06The rocks are heated, then rapidly cooled.
25:10We'll pull those bits of quartz out.
25:12They'll be super hot and chuck them into cold water.
25:16Cracks it.
25:18Acting like bellows, a leaf blower generates furnace-like temperatures.
25:24Very hot.
25:28You ever seen anything like this before, Brendan?
25:29No, mate.
25:30I've never had the opportunity to actually cook rocks, so this is a bit different for me.
25:35I think we'll grab another piece.
25:43Oh yeah, there we go.
25:44Look at that.
25:45It just broke straight off.
25:45Topped straight off.
25:48Oh yeah.
25:50Sizzle whistle.
25:53So it doesn't take much cooking to really soften this material up, which is just...
25:58Well, I didn't expect that.
26:00It started as such a hard rock to end up so soft.
26:02So soft and brilliant.
26:04Put a few pieces in.
26:06Okay.
26:13So how far do you take that?
26:14Back to dust?
26:15That could do it.
26:16Yeah, it's basically as fine as I can get it.
26:21Keep you fit, though.
26:22It does.
26:25Yeah, right.
26:26Pretty good.
26:27So now it's really about wetting this down and then panning it off.
26:31We'll now wash the lights off the top.
26:34Gold being a really extremely dense element, it's going to water sink to the bottom.
26:39And stay at the bottom.
26:40Stay at the bottom.
26:40Yeah, right, yeah.
26:44I try to get it down to about a tablespoon quantity.
26:50So now what I'm going to do is just roll it anti-clockwise.
26:52It's effectively moving the water across it.
26:54All the lights brought down to the back.
26:56Yeah.
26:56And the front keep all the heavies.
26:59Oh.
27:01That's nice, is it?
27:04See?
27:04Yeah, I see it.
27:05Just see it.
27:06There's actually gold there.
27:07There's two.
27:08Two specks.
27:09Yeah.
27:10We just found gold, boys.
27:15We just found gold.
27:17You're all kidding me.
27:19Small, but it's gold.
27:22That's it.
27:23It's like a pair of eyes looking at me.
27:25Well, that's two more than I thought.
27:26We're going to get out of this load.
27:29Oh, no, no, no.
27:31That's mine.
27:32I see the dynamics already.
27:34Wow.
27:35That's just from crushing a bit of quartz.
27:37That's unbelievable.
27:39Where there's one sniff of gold, there's more.
27:42So what's stopping there being a better piece of country that suits gold coming along and being found?
27:48It's probably.
27:51It's really surprising and it sort of lifts your spirit up a bit, too, to know that gold can appear
27:56in a lot of areas.
27:58That's great.
27:59It was a great feeling.
28:00I didn't expect.
28:01I didn't expect that.
28:03No, no way.
28:04I was so thinking we had a sample.
28:05So it's a good start.
28:06I'm really excited.
28:08We found gold.
28:11For me, it gives a conviction of what Lasseter was saying, that there's a big gold reef out here.
28:16It just makes the idea of it being in the ground a lot stronger.
28:38Just doing a bit of a vehicle pre-start, just checking that the oil levels are good.
28:43In the remote outback, daily maintenance of your vehicle is crucial.
28:48There's a good chance you can perish really quickly if you break down.
28:52As team mechanic, this is Brendan's responsibility.
28:56If you run out of oil and damage the engine out here, you're not going to get very far, so
29:00you could be waiting for quite a while.
29:06If you don't look after your vehicles and your equipment, they can fail when you're really quick.
29:13In 1930, Lasseter's expedition had their fair share of mechanical setbacks.
29:19One of their trucks had a crippling breakdown.
29:23The other caught fire.
29:28The bad luck didn't stop there.
29:30A boulder rolled down a hillside, narrowly missing the men.
29:35And most dramatically, their biplane crashed on take-off.
29:40The pilot, lucky to survive.
29:58Deeper into the outback, the team enter Aboriginal controlled land.
30:03A vast tract of country occupying the heart of the continent.
30:12For over 40,000 years, Aboriginal people have lived in this desert country.
30:20In Lasseter's time, most were still living traditional nomadic lives.
30:28Few had ever seen Europeans before.
30:32If any had met Lasseter, it would have left a lasting impression.
30:38Becoming part of an oral history, passed down through generations.
30:47To enter this part of Australia, permits are required.
30:53Access to sacred sites is by invitation only.
30:57A protocol that Lasseter did not follow.
31:04That's Leo there.
31:06Sitting in the shade.
31:08Before they continue on, the team are meeting with cultural guide, Leo.
31:13Three omega.
31:15Hey Leo.
31:16Hey Leo, how are you mate?
31:18Just have a seat.
31:19We'll have a little bit of a yard.
31:23You know, I wanted to sit down here with you fellas.
31:26When people do come out to areas like this, it's good for people to acknowledge the country that we're in.
31:32One thing that you've got to think about here is that, you know, this country's alive.
31:38Just like we're sitting here breathing and looking around here.
31:41So the country can see you too, for who you are.
31:46For yourself and for your own well-being.
31:49Acknowledging the country that you're on.
31:52The best way to do it, just get a bit of sand like this and just let it run through
31:58your hand and just letting the country know, the spirits know that you're only visiting.
32:04And then that way, you know, you get a safe passage, you know.
32:11By the country, we're just here to pass through and visit.
32:18It's over us.
32:21Appreciate where we are.
32:34Every land has got spirit.
32:37You don't want bad spirits attaching to yourself and, you know, there's been stories that that's happened to people, you
32:43know.
32:43So it's real.
32:46Yeah, just give you that rite of passage, you know, so you can go through and, you know, visit safely.
32:52Nielsen.
32:53Thank you, Leo.
32:54Appreciate your time.
33:01You've got to remember what Leo said, you know, the country doesn't want you to pass, it's going to give
33:06you a hard time on the way through.
33:07That's right.
33:08Makes you think about the Lusseter's expedition, going to areas in this country where they shouldn't have been.
33:17Yeah.
33:17Yeah, that's right.
33:18So they really pushed the boundaries on all fronts, didn't they?
33:20Yeah.
33:21The amount of bad luck they had is, in my eyes, above average.
33:26Yep.
33:26Plane crashes, the boulder rolling down a hill.
33:29The rest of the team was lucky to make it back alive.
33:32Yeah, for sure.
33:47So we've come to Melbourne from Sydney because we found out that Lusseter was born in Victoria, and also that
33:57he might have served in the Australian Army.
34:00Tanya's continuing her investigation into Harry Lusseter's credibility, where it's starting to feel like two steps forward, one step back.
34:11We have lots of different sources telling us different kinds of things.
34:15I'm not quite sure what kind of man he is, whether he's a man of his word or not.
34:20I think that's, for me, that's definitely still up for grabs.
34:26So we've come to the State Library of Victoria, and the wonderfully helpful staff here have helped us dig out
34:34some sources that make mention of Lusseter.
34:39Tanya's first document is a regional newspaper.
34:42A really interesting poem, it seems, from the Foster and Tura Mirror from 1918.
34:51So we're still, we're at the tail end of the First World War.
34:55It's entitled Christian Warfare.
34:58So here we have Lusseter calling himself Lewis, but we know in 1924 he changed his name to Harold.
35:06It's actually very, very moving.
35:08Earth shook beneath their arm tread, as the charging squadrons met, while shot and shell fell thick as hail, till
35:16the face of Earth was wet, with the red lifeblood of the best of Earth.
35:21In stern, sad words he spoke, is this goodwill to men? Behold, a dream for I awoke.
35:29So this is really interesting.
35:31What he's doing in this work is really articulating the sheer desperation that many Australians felt when so many lives
35:40had been lost or injured as a result of the First World War.
35:43And we're seeing a side of his character that we haven't yet seen so far.
35:48I think it's important that we try and piece together what we can about his military contributions.
35:59It looks like Lusseter's military records here.
36:04This looks like his enlistment papers dated the 21st of February, 1916.
36:14So right in the middle of the war.
36:17His name is Lewis Herbert Lasseter, born in the town of Meredith.
36:25He's 35 years old.
36:27Oh, isn't that interesting?
36:29His trade is listed as a bridge engineer.
36:31Wow.
36:33And he served in the Australian army.
36:36That is really interesting.
36:37I wonder what impact that had.
36:39We get a sense from that poem, of course.
36:41It did have a huge impact.
36:43And here we have a really interesting picture of him.
36:51He looks like a man on a mission.
36:55This is a new site, Lasseter.
36:57It adds a whole other chapter to his life story.
37:08Hey Brendan, just come across the creek and just turn right and come down that little track there.
37:13I'm on the bend of the creek here.
37:16See you in a bit later.
37:19Please don't get lost.
37:22Near the remote Aboriginal community of Ikunchi, the team are continuing their search for three distinct hills that Lasseter said
37:31looked like sunbonnets.
37:34We know the reef lies not far from there.
37:37No one's been able to locate those hills.
37:39They might have seen them, but none of know what they are.
37:42But now Leo has discovered a direct link to Lasseter that may point them in the right direction.
37:51Oh, you fellas found me.
37:53Yeah mate.
37:53You're always tucked away mate.
37:55Interesting thing.
37:56A couple of people across the way over there would be probably interested to have a bit of a yarn
38:01with them.
38:02Good.
38:02Thanks mate.
38:03Thanks Leo.
38:05I wonder what this is all about boys.
38:09Hello gentlemen.
38:10Hey Lloyd.
38:11Hello.
38:11How are you?
38:12Got these two here.
38:14You guys might want a story about Lasseters.
38:18Yeah.
38:19So they're willing to say, tell us the story.
38:22Grab a seat.
38:23Wonderful.
38:26It's soft in that.
38:28Yeah.
38:28How do yous know the stories?
38:31My father told me.
38:34Your father passed the story down?
38:36Yeah.
38:36Because he saw Lasseter when he was a little boy.
38:40Yeah, right.
38:41His father.
38:42Right.
38:42His father saw him when he was a little boy.
38:45Yeah.
38:46Wow.
38:46Even my father knows the story too.
38:49Yeah.
38:53Yeah.
39:02So they come through this country?
39:05Yeah.
39:05He was just looking around the rock mountains, you know?
39:08Yeah.
39:09Yeah.
39:09When he was traveling along.
39:11Does he know why he was there?
39:17He's looking for water.
39:19Yeah.
39:21On his own?
39:24Yeah.
39:26Yeah.
39:26On his own.
39:27Oh.
39:28Yeah.
39:49Yeah.
39:51Oh, yeah.
39:51hill there. Halfway. Pretty much, that's what Lasseter was saying. There was three hills
40:00in the shape of sun bonnets. I mean, a third hill in the shape of a quagis hat. We know
40:05the reef lies not far from there. I mean, that's pretty amazing.
40:11That place called Warupu, isn't it? Yeah, it's got a rock with the water.
40:21And from there, we start traveling to the south, coming into the black river area.
40:28That makes sense.
40:31So somewhere in here, he said his gold was in that radial point.
40:38This is beautiful, because we've been studying Lasseter ever since we were 10 years old,
40:45since we were boys. This is very important to me, to us.
40:51I really appreciate your help and your knowledge. Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
41:01It was an amazing moment, mate. We've been doing this for 43 years, and finally I get to sit
41:09down with someone who actually knows the story of where Lasseter actually stood.
41:14So that's first-hand knowledge, so that was pretty amazing.
41:21We were privileged to sit down with them, and that is special in itself, because it's not
41:28something they share with just anybody. So yeah, I do pinch myself, just to make sure it's real.
41:46Well, that was an experience we've had, mate, that you'll probably never have again.
41:50That's not written down anyway. That's oral history.
41:53Yeah, and it's a story that's come from his father.
41:55That's right.
41:55That's not something that's come down from generations.
41:57No.
41:57It's something that's just been spoken.
42:00He said, that's to come through here.
42:03We're on the track.
42:04I mean, we could have been 100 k's that way, or 100 k's that way.
42:08That's right.
42:09But we're on his tail.
42:11Yeah.
42:12It's a different point of us and others has been, they tried to jump to the end.
42:16We did that in the beginning.
42:17Yeah.
42:17Don't get us wrong.
42:18This time's actually going to work out a lot better, because we're starting from the
42:21start, and we're going to step our way right through the entire thing.
42:25And we've already seen the value of that.
42:27That's it.
42:28That's exciting.
42:29Exciting days ahead.
42:30Oh, yeah.
42:32I think the truth is always out there.
42:35It just needed to be uncovered.
42:42Oh, look at that.
42:44Oh, boy, she's shredded, eh?
42:47We've got no spares.
42:49This is awesome.
42:51That's a cross.
42:54There it is.
42:55We've got it.
42:57You've done it, Jack.
42:59Might be onto something here, mate.
43:13Do it.
43:20I feel like that.
43:28Falling all me really.
43:29Try.
43:29How is it?
43:29I feel likeมafu 묻lannouUNT.
43:30I feel like he's gonna lie about my child.
43:31All yes.
43:33Like someone.
43:33There it is.
43:34There it is.
43:34You
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