Sado Gold Mine — 400-Year Underground Empire
The Sado Kinzan gold and silver mine operated continuously from 1601 to 1989, producing 78 tons of gold and 2,330 tons of silver over its 388-year history — making it one of the world's longest-running precious metal operations. During the Edo period, Sado gold financed the Tokugawa shogunate and represented up to 20% of Japan's total economic output. The mine tunnels extend 400km underground across multiple elevation levels, with visitor routes now passing through Edo-period hand-carved shafts where life-size animatronic miners demonstrate traditional extraction techniques using oil lamps, chisels, and manual ore carts.
The mine museum displays actual gold ore veins still visible in the tunnel walls, water drainage systems from the 1600s, and the refining workshops where mercury amalgamation separated gold from crushed rock. The surface mine area shows the dramatic V-shaped gorge (Doyu-no-Wareto) created by 400 years of open-pit mining — a geological wound 74 meters deep that has become Sado's iconic landscape image.
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