Centralization Of Ore Delivery From Mines Of Compañia De Real Del Monte Y Pachuca

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 38
- File Size:
- 1262 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1934
Abstract
THE mines operated by the Compañia de Real del Monte y Pachuca, Pachuca, Mexico, are in two districts, the Pachuca, and Real del Monte. The principal area of mineralization is within a rectangle roughly 10 miles from east to west and 6 miles from north to south. It contains a number of veins from 2 to 20 ft. wide, which are exploited by this mining company. The scattered position of the producing mines led to the construction of two mills between 1906 and 1908; the Loreto mill, in Pachuca, averaged 2600 tons daily, and the Guerrero mill, in Real del Monte, milled 1270 tons daily. On Feb. 1, 1929, the management decided to enlarge the Loreto mill to take the combined tonnage of both mills at that time. This economic measure required the centralization of ore delivery, which would also afford a material saving in the cost of ore transport. The centralization would give the company the following advantages over the former system of operation: 1. Beneficiation at a single mill, closer to source of materials and supplies than the abandoned- Guerrero mill. The refinery is, also in the Loreto patio. 2. Ore delivery to surface at one point (San Juan Pachuca shaft) instead of at four. 3. Elimination of aerial tramways. To show what would be required to effect this centralization, it is necessary to describe the means by which the ore was delivered to the two mills, prior to centralization. The heart of the Real del Monte district is roughly four miles from that of the Pachuca section. The producing mines in these two districts were: Pachuca district: Santa Ana mine Camelia group
Citation
APA:
(1934) Centralization Of Ore Delivery From Mines Of Compañia De Real Del Monte Y PachucaMLA: Centralization Of Ore Delivery From Mines Of Compañia De Real Del Monte Y Pachuca. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1934.