Application Of Mineral Beneficiation Techniques To The Extraction Of Values From Municipal Refuse

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Martin H. Stanczyk
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
16
File Size:
1089 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1972

Abstract

The Organic Act of 1910 established the Bureau of Mines and gave it authority and responsibility for conducting research on separation, recovery, and recycling of waste products and scrap generated by the mineral and metals industries and the consuming public.(1)1 It was apparent to our Nation's leaders even then that mineral resources, once mined, are irreplaceable and that the development of methods for recycling the values contained in wastes would be required to solve the problem of even¬tual scarcity, Estimates of the increase in per capita consumption of mineral resources in this country indicate that the consumption of metals, minerals, and fossil fuels by 1980 will be double that consumed in 1970 (2). The United States can expect to meet its future mineral needs in three basic ways: the first is through increased production of primary raw minerals; second by increasing imports from foreign sources; and third by recycling secondary materials and metals that were formerly discarded as waste. Rather than consider these
Citation

APA: Martin H. Stanczyk  (1972)  Application Of Mineral Beneficiation Techniques To The Extraction Of Values From Municipal Refuse

MLA: Martin H. Stanczyk Application Of Mineral Beneficiation Techniques To The Extraction Of Values From Municipal Refuse. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1972.

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