Concentration Experiments With The Siliceous Red Hematite Of The Birmingham District, Ala. ? Introduction.

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Joseph T. Singewald
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
91
File Size:
28644 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1917

Abstract

The possible value of the red hematite iron ore of the southern Appalachian States, if some practicable method of concentrating it could be devised, has long been recognized. The ore is very low grade, and although in enormous quantities, particularly in the States of Alabama, Tennessee, and Georgia, is only at a few points rich enough to work, and even the best of it ranks among the lowest grade iron ores being mined in the United States. A cheap method of beneficiating this ore would make enormous quantities available and vastly increase the iron-ore resources of the country. However, this low-grade ore in effect constitutes a potential iron reserve, and as long as ample quantities of ore can be obtained elsewhere the question of its utilization does not demand immediate notice. Where these ores are in part of workable grade, however, a problem of more immediate importance arises which, from considerations of economy and prevention of waste in their mining, ought to be solved or, at least, attacked as quickly as possible. Where these ores are being worked they are usually intimately associated with lower-grade material that in mining is left behind. The difficulty and expense of going into ground broken by old workings makes the recovery of this lower-grade ore practically impossible and it is lost forever. Success in concentrating the red ores, therefore, would save material that is now being irretrievably lost. The successful large-scale concentration of law-grade ore in the last few years on the Lake Superior iron ranges should encourage the attack of similar problems in the Birmingham district.
Citation

APA: Joseph T. Singewald  (1917)  Concentration Experiments With The Siliceous Red Hematite Of The Birmingham District, Ala. ? Introduction.

MLA: Joseph T. Singewald Concentration Experiments With The Siliceous Red Hematite Of The Birmingham District, Ala. ? Introduction.. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1917.

Export
Purchase this Article for $25.00

Create a Guest account to purchase this file
- or -
Log in to your existing Guest account