(Reuters) - Gold rose to a fresh record high $1,104.80 per ounce on Monday, with investors scurrying for a safe haven after a softening U.S. dollar and bleak jobs data underlined the shaky pace of economic recovery.

Here are key dates tracing gold’s trading history since the 1970s, and it’s historic post-September 2009 rise:

* August 1971 - United States President Richard Nixon takes the dollar off the ‘gold standard’, which fixed paper notes’ value to a pre-set quantity of gold. It had been in place, with minor modifications, since the Bretton Woods Agreement of 1944 fixed the conversion rate for one troy ounce of gold at $35.

* August 1972 - U.S. devalues dollar to $38 per ounce of gold.

* March 1973 - Most major countries adopt floating exchange rate system.

* May - U.S. devalues dollar to $42.22 per ounce.

* January 1980 - Gold hits record high at $850 per ounce. High inflation because of strong oil prices, Soviet intervention in Afghanistan and the impact of the Iranian revolution, prompts investors to move into the metal.

* August 1999 - Gold falls to a low at $251.70 on worries about central banks reducing reserves of gold bullion and mining companies selling gold in forward markets to protect against falling prices.

* October 1999 - Gold reaches a two-year high at $338 after agreement to limit gold sales by 15 European central banks. Market sentiment toward gold begins to turn more positive.

* February 2003 - Gold reaches a four and a half year high on safe-haven buying in run-up to conflict with Iraq.

* December-January 2004 - Gold breaks above $400, reaching levels last traded in 1988. Investors increasingly buy gold as risk insurance for portfolios.

* November 2005 - Spot gold breaches $500 for the first time since December 1987, when spot hit $502.97.

* April 11, 2006 - Gold prices surpass $600, the highest point since December 1980, with funds and investors pouring money into commodities on a weak dollar, firm oil prices and geopolitical worries.

* May 12 - Gold prices peak at $730 an ounce with funds and investors pouring money into commodities on a weak dollar, firm oil prices and political tensions over Iran’s nuclear ambitions.

* June 14 - Gold falls 26 percent to $543 from its 26-year peak after investors and speculators sell out of commodity positions.

* November 7, 2007 - Spot gold hits a 28-year high of $845.40 an ounce.

* January 2, 2008 - Spot gold breaks above $850.

* March 13 - Benchmark gold contract trades over $1,000 for the first time in U.S. futures market.

* March 17 - Spot gold hits an all-time high of $1,030.80 an ounce. U.S. gold futures touch record peak of $1,033.90.

* Sept 17 - Spot gold rises by nearly $90 an ounce, a record one-day gain, as investors seek safety amid turmoil on the equity markets.

* Feb 20, 2009 - U.S. gold futures rise back above $1,000 an ounce to a peak of $1,005.40 as investors turn to gold as major economies face recession and equity markets tumble.

* Sept 8 - U.S. gold futures hit $1,000 an ounce for the first time since February as the dollar’s weakness, concerns about the sustainability of global economic recovery and worries about future inflation underpinned sentiment.

* Oct 6 - Gold hits a record high of $1,035.95 an ounce in Europe, with buying fueled by dollar weakness.

* Oct 8 - Spot gold tops $1,050 per ounce, as the dollar’s continued struggle makes the precious metal more attractive to investors.

* Oct 20 - Gold rises above $1,060 an ounce.

* Nov 3 - Gold crests $1,080 an ounce, defying dollar strength as the International Monetary Fund’s 200-tonne sale of gold to India’s central bank boosted sentiment toward the metal.

* Nov 4 - Gold surges to 1,097.25 an ounce, a record for a second straight day, as the dollar drops broadly after the Federal Reserve says it intends to keep interest rates low for some time.

* Nov 6 - New York gold futures rise to a record above $1,100 as the dollar eases in the wake of weaker-than-expected U.S. non-farm payrolls data, while spot gold hits a record high at $1,100.90 an ounce.

* Nov 9 - Gold powers to another record of $1,104.80 an ounce, as the falling U.S. currency and bleak jobs data spurs buying from investors seeking a safe haven. U.S. December gold futures also scale a lifetime high, of $1,105.4 an ounce.

Sources: Reuters, GFMS Ltd, World Gold Council, Commodity Research Bureau