Butte Paper - The Evolution of the Round Table for the Treatment of Metalliferous Slimes

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 24
- File Size:
- 962 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1914
Abstract
During the last half century a great amount of ingenuity and energy has been devoted to the invention of appliances for the recovery of valuable minerals from very fine sands and slimes. The reason for this is that in almost every dressing plant the greatest losses of values, considered relatively as well as absolutely, occur in the treatment of slimes. The natural aim of mill operators to minimize these losses has in recent years received another impetus, from the fact that the gradually diminishing occurrence of high-grade ores makes a more intense recovery of values from existing resources absolutely necessary for profitable operation. The results of such attempts are found in the appearance of a great number of machines and appliances which make it profitable to-day to rework old clumps, containing the tailings of older processes. A constantly growing difficulty of obtaining skilled labor and the increase in wages made it prohibitory to employ those types of machines which required much attention, and in the middle of the ninieteenth century the various concentrating tables of the percussion type, which automatically discharge their products, began to take the place of the intermittent tables, on which, when the bed had reached a certain thickness, operation had to be stopped in order to allow the skimming by hand of the separate layers formed on the table. In the course of years, two general types of machines evolved for the treatment of fine sands arid slimes: The so-called concentrators and vanners, on the one hand, and the buddles and round tables on the other.' For the profitable treatment of the very finest slimes, round tables have as a last resort proved more satisfactory and econoillical than other machines. In recent years they have agaiu become the subject of close inves-
Citation
APA:
(1914) Butte Paper - The Evolution of the Round Table for the Treatment of Metalliferous SlimesMLA: Butte Paper - The Evolution of the Round Table for the Treatment of Metalliferous Slimes. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1914.