Iron Ore Mining

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Eugene P. Pfleider George F. Weaton
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
31
File Size:
1169 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1968

Abstract

13.4-1. History. During the past ten years the mining and production of iron ores has been through a revolution. From 1939 through 1948, which included World War II, 561,000,000 tons of iron ore was mined and shipped from Minnesota's Mesabi Range to the blast furnaces of the United States for the production of iron and steel products (20, 28, 29). The iron mining industry, anticipating the exhaustion of this highly productive source of raw material, instigated a worldwide search for new sources of iron ores. This search was highly successful, both as to quantity and quality. Venezuela (38), Canada (17, 28, 42), Peru (19, 23, 50, 52, 54, 56) Chile, (1, 66, 75), Brazil, and Liberia were among the countries where enormous deposits of high quality iron ores were discovered. The exploitation of these deposits took away the monopoly held by the Lake Superior region for so many years and created a highly competitive market for high quality natural iron ores. 13.4-2. Exploration and Development Practices. SPECIFIC TO IRON MIN- ING. American industries are motivated to continue exploration because new ore discoveries often lead to an improved competitive position with respect to raw material supply. Exploration techniques have advanced rapidly in recent years, to a degree that potentially important iron ore reserves, stratigically located, may now be detectable by application of a combination of refined and diversified geophysical exploration methods. Since the days of the dip needle, iron ore people have placed greatest reliance on the magnetometer. Its successive stages of development progressed from the balance and the torsion type to the fluxgate, and then to the "sophisticated" magnetometers-conceived and developed in th field of atomic physics. By far the greatest advancement in magnetometer prospecting was made when the self-orienting fluxgate magnetometer took to the air. This was not a new development, but it was a breakthrough in reconnaissance investi-
Citation

APA: Eugene P. Pfleider George F. Weaton  (1968)  Iron Ore Mining

MLA: Eugene P. Pfleider George F. Weaton Iron Ore Mining. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1968.

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