The first cyanide leaching plants in Canada

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
J. E. Dutrizac J. B. Sunstrum
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
5
File Size:
1857 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1999

Abstract

Until relatively recent times, virtually all gold was recovered by gravity and/ or amalgamation methods. Although such techniques are very effective on coarse gold, they become increasingly less useful for finer grains especially when the gold is partly enclosed in rock matrix. Throughout the nineteenth century a number of bonanza gold fields were found in the United States, South Africa, Australia and Canada. In every case the abundant supply of gold nuggets and coarse alluvial gold soon gave way to hard rock mining with its inevitable losses of fine gold in the stamp mill tailings. Continuing efforts to develop new technologies capable of dissolving gold from finely ground ore were eventually successful first with chlorination (the Plattner process) and subsequently with cyanidation. Even before the nineteenth century, however, European chemists such as Scheele and Berthollet were aware that gold could be readily dissolved in an excess of free cyanide(1). As early as 1840, a patent was issued to the Elkington brothers for the dissolution of pure gold in cyanide solution and its subsequent plating onto various metals, with or without an applied electrical current. In 1846, Elsner showed that oxygen was also required to solubilize gold or silver in cyanide media(1). Despite the fact that much work was done on the reaction of cyanide solutions with gold, a viable leaching process for gold ores did not quickly emerge although cyanide solutions were used to enhance amalgamation from the 1860s onward. Major problems were associated with the use of concentrated cyanide solutions; the costs of cyanide were excessive and it was difficult to recover gold from the concentrated media.
Citation

APA: J. E. Dutrizac J. B. Sunstrum  (1999)  The first cyanide leaching plants in Canada

MLA: J. E. Dutrizac J. B. Sunstrum The first cyanide leaching plants in Canada. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1999.

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