Fine Grinding Investigations at Lake Shore Mines

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
The Staff
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
137
File Size:
41211 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1940

Abstract

THE object of the work was to increase the capacity of the plant and, if possible, to reduce costs of the actual unit grinding while doing so. The accompanying assays of an infra-sizer analysis of the cyanide tail (Table l) illustrate the problem in hand. The cyanide tail is a combination of two products, gangue and FeS2. The assay alters by virtue of a change in gold value due to grinding and the relative quantity of FeS2 in the sizes, which itself varies with the grind. The disposal tail is the residue after the cyanide tail is scavenged by flotation, most of the pyrite being removed for roasting. It presents a somewhat different problem, since grinding gangue is all gain, but -10 micron FeS2 does not float nearly as well as + 10 product. This results in compromise in the final size to be aimed at. Extra grinding has hardly any appreciable effect on the gold extraction from the FeS2. (See Milling Investigations Into the Ore as Occurring at the Lake Shore Mine; Trans. C.l.M.M., Vol. XXXIX, 1936).
Citation

APA: The Staff  (1940)  Fine Grinding Investigations at Lake Shore Mines

MLA: The Staff Fine Grinding Investigations at Lake Shore Mines. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1940.

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