Bulletin 141 Yearbook of the Bureau of Mines 1916

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 215
- File Size:
- 5198 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1917
Abstract
Probably no year in the history of the United States showed
greater progress in the mineral industries than 1916. Although this
progress was undoubtedly stimulated by the war in Europe, which
caused extremely high prices for some of the metals, yet the fact
remains that mining is being regarded more as a business and less as
a speculation, and the benefits of business methods are becoming
evident. Practices that were almost universal a few years ago have
been largely abolished, the mining public has been brought to recognize
the folly of wasteful and dangerous methods, and there is a
gratifying unanimity of opinion in regard to the conservation of
life and health, as well as of our mineral resources. The people of
the United States realize more fully than ever before the extent and
value of the country's mineral resources and the possibilities that
await intelligent and well-directed efforts at utilization.
In the past, economic reasons caused deposits of valuable metals
and industrial materials to lie idle; commercial reasons, many of
them not truly economic, led to the waste of valuable constituents in
many ores; the recovery of minerals from the ground was too often
incomplete and accompanied by uncalculated loss; and the treatment
of ores in mills and smelters saved altogether too Iowa proportion of
the metals sought.
Now better methods are being tried on every hand, and the unparalleled
record of the year is largely due to the success of these
efforts. According to the preliminary estimates of the United States
Geological Survey the output of metals and minerals in this country
in the calendar year 1916 had a total gross value of slightly more
than $3,000,000,000. For many metals and minerals the figures broke
all previous records, the new records of some products, as compared
with 1915 figures, being as follows:
Citation
APA:
(1917) Bulletin 141 Yearbook of the Bureau of Mines 1916MLA: Bulletin 141 Yearbook of the Bureau of Mines 1916. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1917.