Launder Washers (d3d794a3-a056-4272-8fce-b8c930b174e5)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
C. P. Proctor J. T. Crawford
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
31
File Size:
1309 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1943

Abstract

TROUGH washers were among the earliest methods used for concentrating ores; they are referred to by Agricola about the middle of the sixteenth century as already being used while the hand- operated jigging sieve had only recently come into use. For cleaning coal the trough washer apparently was first used in France and Belgium about 1841. The early trough washers were intermittent and the refuse at least was shoveled out by hand. The invention of a continuous jig washer, by a Frenchman, Berard, in 1848, acted as a stimulus to coal washings in jigs and retarded progress in trough washing in the nineteenth century. Chapman and Mott' describe a number of trough washers developed in England and on the Continent from 1850 to 1900, such as the Bell and Ramsay, Ramsay, Bell and Green, Wunderlich, Scaife, McLellan, Lodge, Elliott, Blackett, and Murton. The later of these removed the refuse mechanically, either intermittently or continuously, but in ways that interfered with stratification.
Citation

APA: C. P. Proctor J. T. Crawford  (1943)  Launder Washers (d3d794a3-a056-4272-8fce-b8c930b174e5)

MLA: C. P. Proctor J. T. Crawford Launder Washers (d3d794a3-a056-4272-8fce-b8c930b174e5). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1943.

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