Gold In Sea Water--Fact Or Fancy

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Joe B. Rosenbaum
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
10
File Size:
370 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1969

Abstract

Waste solutions from sea water desalination processes are enriched in minerals by a factor of two or three. This suggests that extraction of selected mineral components from the concentrated brine might help pay desalination costs. The possible recovery of gold has received particular mention. Sonstadt, in 1872, reported the gold content of sea water as 65,000 micrograms per cubic meter, or 65,000 parts per trillion. At $35 an ounce, this is equivalent to $0.065 per ton of sea water. Fritz Haber, however, after his abortive venture to restore Post War I Germany to economic health by recovering gold from the sea, concluded the gold content was 4 micrograms per cubic meter. Haber's analysis is equivalent to 0.0004 cent per ton. In the past 10 years, investigators using advanced analytical techniques reported from 4 to 27 micrograms per cubic meter. Our brief experiments to determine a threshhold value for the gold in sea water employed solvent extraction for initial concentration, evaporation of the gold-loaded organic for further concentration, and atomic absorption analysis of the gold in the concentrated organic. Radioactive gold was used as a tracer for monitoring the gold through the concentration and analytical steps. Our method established that sea water contains about 11 parts gold per trillion parts sea water, or 0.001 cent worth per ton. This agrees closely with results of recent studies by other investigators employing ion exchange resins and neutron activation techniques.
Citation

APA: Joe B. Rosenbaum  (1969)  Gold In Sea Water--Fact Or Fancy

MLA: Joe B. Rosenbaum Gold In Sea Water--Fact Or Fancy. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1969.

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