Virginia Beach Paper - The Bauxites; A Study of a New Mineralogical Family (see Discussion, "Bauxite," p. 855)

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 9
- File Size:
- 372 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1895
Abstract
BAUXITE, at first considered as a mineralogical curiosity without importance, now attracts daily increased attention from mineralogists, geologists, and manufacturers. The metallurgy of aluminum, which has entered with the advent of electrolysis upon a new phase within the last few years, requires every day larger quantities of pure alumina, and this can only be obtained from bauxite, which is, of known substances, the richest in free alumina. Bauxite has been mined since 1872 in France, whereabout 200,000 tons have been produced, and where, as a natural consequence, its deposits, qualities, and applications have become known. Within a few years past, discoveries of important deposits of bauxite have been made in the United States and Canada, and this almost entirely new subject has thus acquired an additional interest for the mining engineers and metallurgists of the American continent. A brief summary of the available data concerning it appears likely, therefore, to be appropriate and valuable.* I.—HISTORICAL. It was in 1821 that the famous chemist Berthier discovered at Baux (Bouches du Rhône) a hydrate of alumina (varying from 66 to 79 per cent. in its contents of the oxide) mixed with silica and
Citation
APA:
(1895) Virginia Beach Paper - The Bauxites; A Study of a New Mineralogical Family (see Discussion, "Bauxite," p. 855)MLA: Virginia Beach Paper - The Bauxites; A Study of a New Mineralogical Family (see Discussion, "Bauxite," p. 855). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1895.