IC 8225 Copper

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 352
- File Size:
- 57020 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1965
Abstract
This survey is one of a series of Bureau of Mines publications designed
to serve the needs of Government and industry for comprehensive information
on mineral commodities and activities.
Copper, a versatile metal, has been vital to all civilizations from prehistoric
times to the present. Its essential value in antiquity and until the
nineteenth century arose from its malleability and ease of working, its corrosion
resistance and durability', its attractive colors in alloyed and unalloyed forms,
and, of course, its availability. The principal uses were for tools, utensils,
vessels, weapons, pipe, statuary and other objects of art, and for building
and architectural pur£~ses where formability, permanence, and beaut)" were
necessary qualities. Utilization of copper based on these physical and
mechanical properties has grown tremendously for commercial, structural,
mechanical, architectural, and art items; and its capacity for forming numerous
alloys has led to a myriad of applications from miniature copper and brass
eyelets to huge bronze battleship propellers. The early nineteenth century
marks the epoch of the greatest use of copper, transmitting electrical energy.
This particular property of copper is fundamental to the spectacular growth
of the electrical industry and all associated industries relying on electricity
for power, light, and heat. More than half of all copper produced is used for
transmission of electricity.
The copper industry has been able to expand along with the mounting
demand because of the ever increasing discovery of resources in the world
and advances in mining, metallurgical, and fabricating technologies. World
production and consumption rose progressively from about 18,000 tons in
1800 to more than 4.5 million tons in 1960. The estimated world reserve of
primary- copper has more than doubled since 1935, being 212 million tons in
1960. Ninety percent of this reserve is credited to eight countries-the
United States, Canada, Chile, Peru, the Soviet Union, Poland, Northern
Rhodesia, and the Republic of the Congo. The United States share is 32.5
million tons of copper in ore, averaging approximately 0.9 percent.
Another reserve being accumulated in the industrial countries of the
world is copper products now in use that will eventually be discarded as scrap
and become available for recovering secondary copper. In the United
States this resource of more than 30 million tons, provides about one-fourth
of the annual supply.
Citation
APA:
(1965) IC 8225 CopperMLA: IC 8225 Copper. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1965.