Controlled Environment Through Plant Design At Asarco's Mission Crushing Plant

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 17
- File Size:
- 467 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1971
Abstract
In the past 100 years in the mining industry, many references are made to the "Widow Makers", 'Miners Con" and many other derogatory names related to physical hazards. They reflect the lack of understanding of the problem facing the early day miner. Workers were enticed, in some cases, to take a chance against a medical question mark that could not be explained by the doctors of those early days. The optimism of the mining man and the challenge of work led him to believe that the physical results could not apply to himself and only applied to some of his fellow workers. Much of the time, to his dismay, he found that he had lost to the game of chance. As medical knowledge improved and mining management began to understand the effects of conditions in the mines and beneficiation plants, steps were taken to alleviate or eliminate the health hazards that were present, The organizations engaged in mining that did not take an active interest in employee health found themselves to eventually be placed in the position of being forced to take action by Federal and State legislation. We find ourselves in the 1970's on the threshold of a new era where the general public is concerned vociferously about "their" environment and the industry feels the governmental controls more strongly than ever before. It can be said that in the past 100 years we have advanced from the "Widow Makers" of the 1870's to the "Retirement Makers" of today. The difficulties of the early days in underground mining were of times compounded in the beneficiation plants above ground. As late as the 1950's some crushing and milling installations in the United States were operating under environmental conditions that complied to the then existing legislation but were below the health level sought by conscientious management. The Mission Concentrator Crushing Plant was designed in 1959 and placed in operation in July, 1961. In the past ten years the crushing plant has been continuously complimented by technical people, government inspectors and casual
Citation
APA:
(1971) Controlled Environment Through Plant Design At Asarco's Mission Crushing PlantMLA: Controlled Environment Through Plant Design At Asarco's Mission Crushing Plant. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1971.