No one has been found alive.
"Today the searching has stopped because it was too dangerous," the man said from the scene of the tragedy in Jebel Amir district, more than 200 kilometres northwest of the North Darfur state capital El Fasher.
The unlicensed desert mine began to collapse on Monday, and several days later the stench of death was seeping out of the baked earth.
It was not clear whether they were rescuers or miners.
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Nobody else has been found, alive or dead, said the miner, who asked to remain anonymous.
"According to what I got from my people here yesterday, they didn't find anybody (else)," he told AFP today.
The Jebel Amir district chief, Haroun al-Hassan, could not be reached but yesterday he said rescuers using hand tools were "having difficulty" to reach the victims.
He said heavy machinery could not be brought in out of fear that it would cause a further collapse.
Hassan said the number of victims was unclear yesterday, though he gave an initial death toll of more than 60 on Thursday.
Production from unofficial gold mines has become a key revenue source for the cash-strapped government in Khartoum.
It is also a tempting but dangerous occupation for residents of Sudan's poverty-stricken western region of Darfur which has been devastated by a decade of civil war, inter-tribal fighting and other violence.
A humanitarian source said earlier this year that close to 70,000 people were digging for gold in Jebel Amir.
The lost oil accounted for most of Khartoum's export earnings and half of its fiscal revenues, sending inflation above 40 percent while the currency plunged in value on the black market.
Sudan's Mining Minister Kamal Abdel Latif said traditional mining produced 41 tonnes of gold worth USD 2.5 billion (1.9 billion euros) from January to November last year.
In 2011, the government estimated there were more than 200,000 unlicensed artisanal gold producers, generating most of the country's output of the resource.
Seven weeks of clashes over gold between two Arab tribes in Jebel Amir early this year killed more than 500 members of the Beni Hussein tribe, an MP for the group has said.
The violence uprooted an estimated 100,000 people.
The fighting between the Beni Hussein and Rezeigat erupted when a leader of the latter tribe who is a border guard officer apparently laid claim to a gold-rich area inside Beni Hussein territory, Amnesty International said.
Beni Hussein refused to pay newly imposed government mining fees which amounted to "huge, huge money", a humanitarian source told AFP at the time.