Chattanooga Paper - Treatment of Roasted Pyrites by the Longmaid and Claudet Processes for the Extraction of Gold and Silver

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 21
- File Size:
- 826 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1886
Abstract
The treatment of the residues from the manufacture of sulphuric acid which contain small amounts of copper, silver and gold, has attracted considerable attention in Europe. They are successfully treated in several works on the continent, and in as many as twenty establishments in different parts of England. As the process must sooner or later attract attention in this country, I have put together my notes made in three of the most important establishments in Europe. These are the works at Hemixem near Antwerp, of Duisbourg in Westphalia, and of Oker in the Hartz. In the last works only, the ores are produced in the vicinity of the place where they are treated. The works at Duisbourg treat ores which come from the Rio Tinto mines in Spain, which often contain considerable quantities of arsenic. They are roasted in a number of different works along the Rhine for the manufacture of sulphuric acid. They are brought by boat and are landed at the works by steam-cranes. They are carried at once by a double-inclined plane worked by steam to the storagehouses to be kept, until treated. The wagons, after being weighed, are dumped. The ore is assayed at once, the assay-sample being taken from the boat while the ores are being discharged. They are all fine, and contain two to eight per cent. of copper and about sixty per cent. of iron, and a small amount of silver and gold. Their average composition is given below:
Citation
APA:
(1886) Chattanooga Paper - Treatment of Roasted Pyrites by the Longmaid and Claudet Processes for the Extraction of Gold and SilverMLA: Chattanooga Paper - Treatment of Roasted Pyrites by the Longmaid and Claudet Processes for the Extraction of Gold and Silver. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1886.