Canadian Paper - Pyritic Smelting in the Black Hills

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Franklin R. Carpenter
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
14
File Size:
653 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1901

Abstract

Pyritic smelting, so-called, as practiced in the Black Hills is pyritic smelting only in the sense that Dr. John Percy uses the expression in his " Metallurgy of Silver," where he describes a process for smelting dry silver-ores in connection with iron pyrites, to form a regulus. The ores treated by this process in the Black Hills are very siliceous, averaging about 74 per cent. of silica, from 10 to 20 of iron oxide, 4 or 5 of alumina, and from 2 to 4 of lime. In 1889, while Dean of the South Dakota School of Mines, I took up the question of their smelting. There were neither copper- nor lead-ores in the Hills; hence pyrite and pyrrhotite, of which there are large deposits, were employed to form a regulus. This mixture of pyrite and pyrrhotite, besides being absolutely barren of gold and silver, carried an average of 30 per cent. of silica. The only basic material available as a flux for the great excess of silica in the ores and in the pyrite was a dolomitic limestone. Moreover, the local coke gave 24 per cent. of ash, 60 per cent. of which was silica—as unpromising a set of conditions as can well be imagined. We had before us the examples of Mr. W. Lawrence Austin, of this Institute, who had experimented at Toston, Montana,"
Citation

APA: Franklin R. Carpenter  (1901)  Canadian Paper - Pyritic Smelting in the Black Hills

MLA: Franklin R. Carpenter Canadian Paper - Pyritic Smelting in the Black Hills. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1901.

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