St. Louis Paper - October, 1917 - Experiments in the Recovery of Tungsten and Gold in the Murray District, Idaho

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
R. R. Goodrich N. E. Holden
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
8
File Size:
641 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1918

Abstract

TheRe is a small area about Murray where bedded gold quartz veins occur in Prichard slate. The ore taken from the upper levels, during the early days, was free milling and was treated by stamp milling and amalgamation. There was likewise a considerable placer working. The report is current that tungsten (scheelite) was encountered, which interfered with the amalgamation in the stamp mills and which, in placering, collected in the riffles in the sluice boxes and clogged them. Consequently, in the quartz mines, the scheelite, when encountered, was rejected, being thrown into the waste, sometimes inside the mine and at other times outside on the dump. The free surface ores became worked out and as the ore in depth became pyritic and rebellious to amalgamation the mines closed down. Last spring tungsten ore brought a high price, near $80 per unit, 60 per cent. W03 and up. This so stimulated the output of tungsten ore that old dumps were explored and waste stored in the mines was gone over. Tungsten was likewise mined from virgin ground. So the district produced quite heavily for a time. The condition now is different. The price is not so high, about $20 per unit WO3, which makes profits questionable when mining in new ground. The accumulations from early day mining have been exhausted and the output has greatly declined. The Golden Chest mine was the heaviest producer of tungsten. The months of June and July were spent at this mine studying the problem. Since the mine had produced both gold and tungsten, we looked forward to the problem of recovering both from what might be called a gold-tungsten ore. A study of the Golden Chest vein showed this was not to be the case. While gold ore and tungsten ore come from the same vein, the tungsten ore is confined to a more or less disturbed or distorted portion
Citation

APA: R. R. Goodrich N. E. Holden  (1918)  St. Louis Paper - October, 1917 - Experiments in the Recovery of Tungsten and Gold in the Murray District, Idaho

MLA: R. R. Goodrich N. E. Holden St. Louis Paper - October, 1917 - Experiments in the Recovery of Tungsten and Gold in the Murray District, Idaho. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1918.

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