Grinding and Particle Size Are Critical to the Profitability of Industrial Minerals

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Steve Kral
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
3
File Size:
349 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1990

Abstract

The success of the industrial minerals end of the mining industry is often overshadowed by the high price of copper, the glamour of gold, and the nation's huge reserves of coal. Those three segments of the industry, however, along with every other business in the world, could not function without the products that are composed of a variety of industrial minerals. And, according to Haydn H. Murray, past president of SME, the value of industrial minerals in the United States is more than triple that of metals, about $19 billion a year versus $6 billion. In the developed countries of the world, he said, the value of industrial minerals is nearly always greater than the value of metallic minerals. Murray, also a professor of geology at Indiana University, was the luncheon speaker at the SME-sponsored Grinding of Industrial Minerals conference held in Asheville, NC this past September. Producers of industrial minerals know they must squeeze the maximum value out of the industrial mineral being mined and processed, Murray told the audience of about 100 people. Grinding and particle size, then, are vital to a commodity's profitability.
Citation

APA: Steve Kral  (1990)  Grinding and Particle Size Are Critical to the Profitability of Industrial Minerals

MLA: Steve Kral Grinding and Particle Size Are Critical to the Profitability of Industrial Minerals. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1990.

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