Galena Flotation Concentrator, Lake Gulch, Idaho (1e9afbd2-c653-479f-9329-b89a16ac179a)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
W. L. Zeigler
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
5
File Size:
580 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1927

Abstract

The mill is a departure from gravity concentration and has gained a reputation for the low initial cost of erection, extreme simplicity and the low cost of milling on the refractory character of the ore which is treated. The structure is of heavy timbers with board walls and corrugated roofing. The floors are concrete and the general layout is of the ground floor only. All the machines are driven by individual motors and the transmission usually found in such a plant is entirely absent. (Fig. 2.) ORE The ore from the Galena mine is sheared Wallace quartzite replaced with quartz, siderite, pyrite, sphalerite, gray copper (tetrahedrite) and very fine-grained argentiferous galena. Much of the silver is undoubtedly associated with the gray copper, the amount, however, apparently varies with different localities in the vein. An average assay of the ore is 6.0 per cent. lead, 1.3 per cent. zinc, 0.3 per cent. copper, 17.5 per cent. iron and 4.5 oz. silver. The concentrates produced are of an average 53 per cent. lead, 40 oz. silver, 8 per cent. zinc and 11 per cent. iron, while the tailings are 0.5 per cent. lead, 0.4 oz. silver. With the present market for zinc no attempt is made to produce a zinc concentrate.
Citation

APA: W. L. Zeigler  (1927)  Galena Flotation Concentrator, Lake Gulch, Idaho (1e9afbd2-c653-479f-9329-b89a16ac179a)

MLA: W. L. Zeigler Galena Flotation Concentrator, Lake Gulch, Idaho (1e9afbd2-c653-479f-9329-b89a16ac179a). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1927.

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