Milling Practice Of American Zinc Co. Of Tennessee At Mascot
    
    - Organization:
 - The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
 - Pages:
 - 32
 - File Size:
 - 1109 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jan 9, 1924
 
Abstract
THE milling practice at Mascot, at present, consists of dry crushing to 5/8 in., jigging, fine grinding, and flotation. The ore arrives at the mill from two mines, No. 1 mine shaft being located in the mill proper, and No. 2 mine shaft being situated about 2000 ft. east of the mill. No. 2 mine is served by a coarse-crushing plant and aerial tramway to the mill bins. In jigging the No. 2 mine ore, 50 per cent. of the mill feed is rejected by the jigs as a jig tailing ranging from 5/8 in. to 10 mesh; the balance of this ore, after removing a jig concentrate, is ground to flotation feed. In jigging No. 1 mine ore, approximately 80 per. cent. of the mill feed is rejected as a coarse jig tailing, and the balance is ground to flotation feed without the removal of a jig concentrate. The difference in the treatment is due to the fact that No. 2 mine ore carries a higher content of zinc than that from No. 1 mine. Of the total concentrates produced, 30 per cent. are made on jigs and 70 per cent. by flotation. At present, 1350 tons of No. 2 ore and 800 tons of No. 1 ore are treated each 24 hours. The recoveries for a typical week are as follows:   Heads 3.55 Jig concentrates 61.30  Jig tails 0.80 Flotation concentrates 60.60  Flotation tails 0.09 Extraction 86.50  The associated minerals are a straw-colored sphalerite, dolomite, calcite, pyrite, quartz, and a small amount of greenockite, which occurs as a stain and sometimes small crystals along with sphalerite, but is comparatively rare. Pyrite is present in small quantities, usually less than 0.5 per cent.; quartz occurs in bands a few inches thick. A complete analysis of the ore is as follows:
Citation
APA: (1924) Milling Practice Of American Zinc Co. Of Tennessee At Mascot
MLA: Milling Practice Of American Zinc Co. Of Tennessee At Mascot. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1924.