RI 3139 Added Recovery By Hydraulic Sizing Of Fine Material In The Land-Pebble Phosphate District Of Florida (ed96b312-2cde-4b79-85ff-950d67cd158c)

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 8
- File Size:
- 2777 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1931
Abstract
The land-pebble district of Florida, wnich in 1928 supplied 96.7 per cent of the phosphate production of that State and 82 per cent of the domestic requirements of the United States, is centered in Polk and Hillsboro Counties about 30 miles east of Tampa The deposits are unconsolidated sediments occurring as beds of phosphate matrix overlain by a mantle of barren sands and clays. The matrix consists of a mixture of sand (quartz grains), clay, and phosphate rock in which the coarsest sand is much finer than the coarsest phosphate; that is, the sand is segregated in the fine material. Before the introduction of classifiers the concentration consisted of log washing, and screening at about 20-mesh, which was usually the finest size that could be taken to maintain commercial grade, 66 per cent B. P. L. (bone phosphate of lime) or more. When classifiers were introduced some of the fines that had escaped at the head of the washery and some of the minus 20-mesh material isolated during the washing and formerly lost supplied the feed. During October, 1927, the United States Bureau of Mines in cooperation with the University of Alabama and the Missouri School of Mines and Metallurgy began to investigate the amenability of phosphatic sands to gravity methods of concentration. The work was under the immediate supervision of B. W. Gandrud, acting supervising engineer of the Southern Experiment Station of the U. S. Bureau of Mines at Tuscaloosa, Ala., and Will H. Coghill, supervising engineer of the ore dressing section of the U. S. Bureau of Mines. More comprehensive testing followed and in the early part of 1930 some of the companies cooperated with the bureau and the above-mentioned institutions in conducting a series of tests on hydraulic classification and tabling. The results indicated that marketable concentrates could be obtained with a recovery of 25 to 45 per cent of the phosphate formerly lost. As a result two companies have introduced hydraulic classification to treat the current tailings, and one of them has substituted classifiers for the 20-mesh screens which had been unsatisfactory. Because the phosphate grains and quartz grains have nearly the same specific gravity, the use of concentrating tables by the customary methods is not applicable. The washeries included in the following report are designated as Nos. 1, 2, and 3.
Citation
APA:
(1931) RI 3139 Added Recovery By Hydraulic Sizing Of Fine Material In The Land-Pebble Phosphate District Of Florida (ed96b312-2cde-4b79-85ff-950d67cd158c)MLA: RI 3139 Added Recovery By Hydraulic Sizing Of Fine Material In The Land-Pebble Phosphate District Of Florida (ed96b312-2cde-4b79-85ff-950d67cd158c). The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1931.