The U. S. Uranium Boom 1942-1980 - SME Annual Meeting 2022

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
T. McNulty
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
4
File Size:
128 KB
Publication Date:
Mar 2, 2022
Industry Topics:
Automation, Economic Viability, Green Technology, Mine Planning, Operations, Processing, Rare Earth Elements, Reclamation, Regulation, Social License, Sustainability, ESG, Tailings, Water Management, Workforce

Abstract

The author was privileged to find employment as a uranium mill chemist for The Anaconda Company while working his way through school in the mid-1950s. He then served Anaconda in various technical and management positions until 1980. This paper describes the prevalent technologies employed by uranium producers, briefly describes various mines and mills in the U. S., and memorializes a few of the thousands of men and women who contributed to the U. S. Uranium Boom. Following isolation of uranium as an element by M. H. Klaproth in 1789, uses of uranium were confined primarily to pigments, glass coloring agents, and ceramic glazes. In 1896, Antoine Becquerel found that uranium is radioactive, releasing particles and energy as it decays. In 1898, Pierre and Marie Curie isolated radium from uranium and learned that it can be an effective treatment for some types of cancer. In 1939, it was discovered that the isotope U235 is fissionable1 . Up to this point, nearly all uranium production was from pitchblende concentrates made in Bohemia, Canada, and the Belgian Congo. In 1938, only about 5 percent (23.85 short tons) of global output was produced from ores of the carnotite mineral that were being mined in the U.S. By the early-1950s, physicists in many countries had begun to recognize the potential for nuclear chain reactions. Ernest Rutherford (UK), Frederick Soddy (UK), and Leo Szilard (US) explained transmutation of elements and formulated the principle of “atom splitting”. In 1934, Marie Curie’s daughter, Irène, and her husband, Frédéric Joliot, identified uranium as the most viable source for this new form of energy. The basic fission process was unraveled by German scientists in December 1938. After Hitler’s army seized the uranium deposits in Czechoslovakia, many feared that Germany would build the first nuclear weapon.
Citation

APA: T. McNulty  (2022)  The U. S. Uranium Boom 1942-1980 - SME Annual Meeting 2022

MLA: T. McNulty The U. S. Uranium Boom 1942-1980 - SME Annual Meeting 2022. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2022.

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