Bethlehem Paper - Notes on the Stamp-Mills and Chlorination-Works of the Plymouth Consolidated Gold Mining Company, Amador County, Ca

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
George W. Small
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
4
File Size:
183 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1887

Abstract

The ore, as it is raised from the mine, has all average assay-value of $11 per ton, chiefly in the form of free gold. All the ore goes directly to the stamp-mills, of which there are two. The older and larger mill contains sixteen batteries of five stamps each, with one Frue vanner to each battery. The new mill has eight batteries of five stamps and two Frues to each battery. The large mill is driven by Leffel turbine wheels, with a pressure of eighty feet, and a consumption of 600 miners' inches of water. The smaller mill is driven by "hurdy-gurdy" wheels with a pressure of about 550 feet and a consumption of 150 inches of water. At both mills the tailings from the stamps pass over about 20 feet of plates on their way to the Frues. In each set of plates the first or upper one is copper, the rest are so-called silver plates. The bullion from the stamps is about 800 fine in gold and 200 in silver. The concentrates from the Frues average from 11/4 to 1 ; per cent. of the ore stamped. They very rarely exceed 2 per cent. I was unable to get the exact assay-value of the concentrates, but it is said to vary between $100 and $200 per ton. The concentrates are treated at the chlorination works at the rate of one hundred tons per month. The capacity of the works is somewhat greater than this, but as the supply of concentrates is limited it is not deemed advisable to work them up any faster. Care is taken to keep the concentrates always damp until they are put into the roasting furnace. If this is not done, a decomposition of the pyrites begins, forming lumps which do not roast, and which consequently cause a loss of gold in the residues from leaching. A Fortschaufelungsofen is used for roasting. Its dimensions, incloding fire-box, are 12' X 80'. The hearth is one continuous plane, but the charges, of which there are three in the furnace at one time, are kept entirely separate. The furnace-men call the three compartments, the "drying," the " burning," and the " cooking" compartments. In the middle, or "burning" compartment, the ore is spread
Citation

APA: George W. Small  (1887)  Bethlehem Paper - Notes on the Stamp-Mills and Chlorination-Works of the Plymouth Consolidated Gold Mining Company, Amador County, Ca

MLA: George W. Small Bethlehem Paper - Notes on the Stamp-Mills and Chlorination-Works of the Plymouth Consolidated Gold Mining Company, Amador County, Ca. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1887.

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