RI 2870 The Occurrence of Jarosite Minerals in Oxidized Lead Ores as a Factor in Metal Losses (0c56b056-1e96-4d0f-94c0-a6e2e8e1654b)

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
R. E. Head Virgil Miller
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
13
File Size:
817 KB
Publication Date:
Apr 1, 1928

Abstract

"INTRODUCTIONRecent investigations at the Intermountain Experiment Station of the Bureau of Mines at Salt Lake City indicate that metallurgists have given little attention to the occurrence of jarosite minerals in the oxidized ores of lead and silver. These investigations have also emphasized the importance of knowing when these minerals occur in the oxidized ores, especially those containing lead, silver, and gold, as their presence is a material factor in selecting a suitable kind of treatment. Since the question of the occurrence of jarosites in oxidized ores has come to the attention of the Bureau of Mines, investigation has indicated that plumbojarosite and argentojarosite are quite common. These two minerals appear to be widely distributed and probably escaped recognition by persons who had attempted to treat certain oxidized lead ores in which the jarosite minerals represented a material portion of the metal content.Consideration of the physical characteristics of the jarosites also indicates that in many cases failure to treat some of the oxidized lead ores with success has been directly due to the fact that the greater portion of their lead and silver content was present as plumbojarosite and argentojarosite. The data and the description of these minerals given in the body of this paper indi¬cate that attempts to recover lead and silver from ores in which appreciable amounts of the metals occur as plumbojarosite and argentojaeosite would be unsuccessful if confined to gravity methods of concentration. There are un-doubtedly considerable tonnages of oxidized lead ores in the various mining regions of this and other countries, and it is quite probable that in some of these ores the metal content of lead and silver may be largely anglesite (lead sulphate) and cerussite (lead carbonate) but that they will also contain cerargyrite (silver chloride), argentojarosite, and plumbojarosite. The treatment of such ores therefore presents an important problem, since a product is discarded from ores from which the recoveries of lead and silver have been below 70 per cent which is probably too low-grade to warrant aftertreatment by any process now in use."
Citation

APA: R. E. Head Virgil Miller  (1928)  RI 2870 The Occurrence of Jarosite Minerals in Oxidized Lead Ores as a Factor in Metal Losses (0c56b056-1e96-4d0f-94c0-a6e2e8e1654b)

MLA: R. E. Head Virgil Miller RI 2870 The Occurrence of Jarosite Minerals in Oxidized Lead Ores as a Factor in Metal Losses (0c56b056-1e96-4d0f-94c0-a6e2e8e1654b). The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1928.

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