Butte Paper - The Precipitation of Copper from the Mine Waters of the Butte District (with Discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
J. C. Febles
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
19
File Size:
1115 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1914

Abstract

The use of iron for the precipitation of copper was known at least as early as the fifteenth century. Both Paracelsus and Basil Valentine refer to it in their writings, as early as 1500 A. D. It was used in Peru for this purpose prior to 1637, and at Rio Tinto, Spain, as early as the sixteenth century. The statement has been made repeatedly that in the early history of the mining industry at Butte, the practicability of this method of recovering copper from solution was overlooked, and that enormous quantities of copper-bearing water were allowed to go to waste, the copper in which might easily have been recovered at small cost; and that this oversight on the part of the mine operators was due to ignorance of this method of recovering copper. As a matter of fact, very little copper-bearing mineral was encountered in the mines of Butte until a depth of 400 or 500 ft. had been reached, and in many cases much greater depths were necessary to reach the copper-bearing zone. The water encountered in the upper levels (although in most cases quite highly mineralized) contained little or no copper, and it was only after considerable areas of copper-bearing ore had been uncovered and developed that copper sulphate began to appear in the mine water in any considerable quantity. In fact, the first water that was observed to contain copper carried it in such small amounts as to be of little or no importance. It was only after years of underground work had opened extensive areas of stopes, drifts, and other underground workings, these being subsequently filled with waste, nearly all of which contained small copper values, which became oxidized by exposure to the air and were acted upon by the slowly percolating mineral water, that the recovery of copper from mine water became commercially important.
Citation

APA: J. C. Febles  (1914)  Butte Paper - The Precipitation of Copper from the Mine Waters of the Butte District (with Discussion)

MLA: J. C. Febles Butte Paper - The Precipitation of Copper from the Mine Waters of the Butte District (with Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1914.

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