The 2,000-Ton Leaching Plant at Anaconda (dc55df8d-7ea1-46db-800d-53ad6f27ff59)

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 1
- File Size:
- 72 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 12, 1916
Abstract
F. N. FLYNN, Clifton, Ariz.-I would like to ask Mr. Mathewson what percentage of his leaching liquor is wasted at this time? It has a bearing on the question in connection with the New Cornelia, and I think it is a very important question. E. P. MATHEWSON, Anaconda, Mont.-I am not sure what the percentage is now, but we don't discard the strong liquors. Something like 25 per cent. of the wash water taken out each day is sent over a special set of scrap iron tanks, and the copper recovered there. We had a little trouble at first. We did not proceed to use the sponge iron for the reason that the plant we originally contemplated was abandoned for flotation. Our original idea was to use a leaching process on all the tailings of the mill, but we found it would take a great deal of time to build a plant; and the cost of operating the plant we estimated to be about the same and the recovery the same. It was a question of time with us, and we decided to adopt flotation. That changed our plans. We now have the leaching plant, treating the tailings of the old dump, and the flotation applied to the current tailings. The sponge iron was figured for the large plant. We can get all the scrap iron necessary for the small plant-plenty from the scrap produced in the main plant of the smelter.
Citation
APA:
(1916) The 2,000-Ton Leaching Plant at Anaconda (dc55df8d-7ea1-46db-800d-53ad6f27ff59)MLA: The 2,000-Ton Leaching Plant at Anaconda (dc55df8d-7ea1-46db-800d-53ad6f27ff59). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1916.