The Evolution Of Lead Smelting Practice At Zambia Broken Hill Development Company, Kabwe, Zambia

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
B. Barlin
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
51
File Size:
1302 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1970

Abstract

Introduction The development of metallurgical practice at lambia Broken Hill is directly related to the change in mineralization of the deposits as mining progressed from the open pits to underground. The ore consists of a mixture of lead and zinc sulphide minerals, together with abundant silicates, carbonates and other oxidized minerals of these metals. The irregularity that characterizes the shape of the orebodies applies equally to their mineral content, which makes ore reserve calculations and the maintenance of a balanced feed to the metallurgical plants, problems of some magnitude. History The Rhodesia Broken Hill Development ,Company was formed in 1904 after an Australian prospector, T. G. Davey, discovered the outcrops in 1902. In the early years zinc ores were calcined for shipment but this proved uneconomic. Cerussite outcrops were then smelted directly in blast furnaces for the production of lead until 1929 when ore above the water level was exhausted.
Citation

APA: B. Barlin  (1970)  The Evolution Of Lead Smelting Practice At Zambia Broken Hill Development Company, Kabwe, Zambia

MLA: B. Barlin The Evolution Of Lead Smelting Practice At Zambia Broken Hill Development Company, Kabwe, Zambia. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1970.

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