Water – A Controlling Factor of Copper Production

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
S. D. Michaelson B. H. Ensign S. J. Hubbard A. W. Last
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
5
File Size:
831 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 7, 1960

Abstract

Of the seventeen western states, five-Arizona, Utah, New Mexico, Montana, and Nevada-produce about 90 pct of this country's primary copper. All seventeen of these states occupy 60 pct of the nation's land area but receive only 25 pct of the country's total precipitation. Seventy percent of this precipitation returns directly to the atmosphere through evaporation and transpiration, leaving very little for ground reservoir recharge or immediate domestic, agricultural, or industrial use. With so limited a supply available for all, competition for water rights among users is severe. The result does not always permit using the limited supply to produce the most valuable end product. Most of industry and much of agriculture can shop around for suitable operating locations. Where water is critical to their purposes, they can and do locate in areas where the needed amounts are available. Such is not the ordinary lot of the mining industry, which must locate in the area of the deposit it is planning to mine and concentrate. In the case of copper this happens to be, for the most part, right in the heart of the semi-arid regions of the West.
Citation

APA: S. D. Michaelson B. H. Ensign S. J. Hubbard A. W. Last  (1960)  Water – A Controlling Factor of Copper Production

MLA: S. D. Michaelson B. H. Ensign S. J. Hubbard A. W. Last Water – A Controlling Factor of Copper Production. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1960.

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