RI 2906 Preliminary Examination Of Low-Grade Bauxite With Particular Reference To Flotation ? Introduction

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
B. W. Gandrud
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
8
File Size:
884 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1928

Abstract

[The meaning of the term "bauxite' has always been somewhat vague and indefinite, and the term has been used in various applications to denote sometimes a rock, sometimes a mineral, but more frequently an ore. It seems logical to think of bauxite as an ore, however, because a very large part (probably at least 85 per cent) of the entire world's production of bauxite is at present being used as a source of aluminum and aluminum chemicals. In the United States there are two districts that, produce bauxite - the Arkansas district and the Alabama-Georgia-Tennessee-Mississippi district. The deposits in Mississippi have been discovered recently and are riot as yet productive but it seems reasonable to consider them as apart of the-district hat includes the deposits of Alabama, Georgia, and Tennessee. The, two districts are often referred to as the Arkansas field and the Appalachian field. Of these two the Arkansas field has been by far the largest producer, and at present over 90 per cent of the bauxite production of they United States comes from the Arkansas field. The bauxite industry in the Appalachian field had its beginning in 1889, and since that time the total production of the states of Alabama, Georgia, and Tennessee has been, nearly a million tons. The production of bauxite in this field has languished in the last five, or six, years, and In 1927 its production was only about 14,000 tons, according to Harder4. The recent decrease in production is due mainly to the fact that many .of the known deposits of commercial-grade ore have become exhausted. There are, however, considerable quantities of low-grade bauxite in the Appalachian field, but these have not been available because there has been no satisfactory way of concentrating low-grade bauxite. The quantity, of low-grade material in the Appalachian field is probably, fully as large as the tonnage of commercial ore which the field has already produced.]
Citation

APA: B. W. Gandrud  (1928)  RI 2906 Preliminary Examination Of Low-Grade Bauxite With Particular Reference To Flotation ? Introduction

MLA: B. W. Gandrud RI 2906 Preliminary Examination Of Low-Grade Bauxite With Particular Reference To Flotation ? Introduction. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1928.

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