Concentration of Oxidized Lead Ores at San Diego Mill, Cia. Minera Asarco

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
AUGUSTUS J. MONKS Norman L. Weiss
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
4
File Size:
633 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1930

Abstract

THE Santa Barbara Unit of the Compania Minera Asarco, of which the San Diego mill is a part, is in the Parral District of southern Chihuahua. Although the concentration of sulfide ores has been practised in Santa Barbara since 1900, the San Diego mill, completed in 1921, was the first plant in northern Mexico to attempt the treatment of oxidized lead ores. From the milling point of view the many ores that have been treated at San Diego are very similar, the differences among them being rather of degree than type. Since 1921 the number of ores from different sources treated simultaneously has varied from four to eleven; in no case have any distinctive characteristics warranted the separate treatment of any of these. The zone of oxidation, source of the ores milled at San Diego, extends to a depth of 300 to 400 ft. below the surface. These ores carry more gold and less silver, lead, copper, and zinc than the underlying sulfide ores; the gangue minerals appear comparatively unchanged by oxidation and leaching. Lead occurs in diverse minerals, chiefly in cerussite, galena, and angle-site, the proportion of the lead in galena varying considerably in the different mines. An average of the feed to the mill would show the following approximate distribution of the lead content:
Citation

APA: AUGUSTUS J. MONKS Norman L. Weiss  (1930)  Concentration of Oxidized Lead Ores at San Diego Mill, Cia. Minera Asarco

MLA: AUGUSTUS J. MONKS Norman L. Weiss Concentration of Oxidized Lead Ores at San Diego Mill, Cia. Minera Asarco. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1930.

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