If you divide the gold price by the silver price, you get the gold-to-silver ratio. It basically shows how many ounces of silver it takes to buy an ounce of gold. It's used in mining to convert mixed gold/silver deposits to gold-equivalent ounces.
So, in 1992, it took about 92 ounces of silver to buy an ounce of gold. Today, the ratio sits at 92.6 — the highest value since March 1993.
As you can see, the gold-to-silver ratio didn't stay high for long. These extremes last a short time. In March 1992, the price of silver was around $3.60 per ounce. Gold was around $330 per ounce. The last time we hit this extreme, the silver price soared. By August 1993, the silver price broke $5.40 per ounce. That was a 52% gain in under six months! To put that in perspective, the current price of silver is $15.25 per ounce. It would need to break $23 per ounce to match that move.