Changes In Lead-Zinc Flotation Practice At Mount Isa Mines Limited, 1955-1 970

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 27
- File Size:
- 694 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1970
Abstract
Lead-zinc sulphide ores at Mount Isa are currently treated at the rate of 180,000 long tons per 28 day period in the No. 2 Concentrator of Mount Isa Mines Limited. Prior to June 1966 lead-zinc ore was treated in part of the No. 1 Concentrator up to a rate of 70,000 long tons per period. Since 1955, two major changes in ore type being processed have occurred. Because of these changes, problems arising from treatment of the ore have altered and during the period several major changes in practice have been advocated and experimentally tested. Most of these flow sheets were developed with a view to overcoming one major problem in the ore. These were invariably abandoned as the Mount Isa lead-zinc ore contains a number of equally major problems all of which must be overcome in the treatment process. MINERALOGY The orebodies are situated in the Mount Isa Shale Group which is Proterozoic in age (Carpentarian System). The sediments consist dominantly of fine grained dolomitic, quartzo-feldspathic shales and siltstones. Specifically, the Mount Isa orebodies lie in the Urquhart shale formation which is characterised by sediments of high albite and orthoclase content denoting a large volcanic component. The Urquhart shales are approximately 3,500 feet thick and extend at least north and south of Mount Isa for 20 miles in each direction. In the area of the silver-lead-zinc orebodies the Urquhart shales are highly pyritic and have a relatively high carbon content. The
Citation
APA:
(1970) Changes In Lead-Zinc Flotation Practice At Mount Isa Mines Limited, 1955-1 970MLA: Changes In Lead-Zinc Flotation Practice At Mount Isa Mines Limited, 1955-1 970. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1970.