RI 3632 Manganese Investigations - Metallurgical Division 13. Ore-Dressing Studies of Manganese Ores Concentration of Manganese-Bearing Ore from the Mayfield Property, Van Horn, Texas

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 19
- File Size:
- 1004 KB
- Publication Date:
- Apr 1, 1942
Abstract
"INTRODUCTION The Mayfield manganese property is about 25 miles south of Van Horn, in Jeff Davis County, Tex. The ore deposit is developed by a large open-cut and a small stope.An 8-ton sample was received for testing; it was taker at random from material on the mine dumps and consisted of a mixture of manganese oxides, barite, and siliceous gangue minerals. The manganese occurred largely as hard, massive, crystalline psilomelane, with a small amount of pyrolusite. The gangue minerals consisted of intermixed iron-stained sand stone, quartzite, chalcedony, calcite, quartz, and barite. Chemical analysis showed 8.9 percent manganese, 3.3 percent iron, 38.4 percent silica, 6.6 percent calcium carbonate, 7.1 percent barium, 3.1 percent alumina, 0.09 percent phosphorus 0.01 tungstic oxide, and less than 0.05 percentAnalysis of selected clean pieces of manganese minerals, free of gangue, showed 48.1 percent manganese end 13.4 percent barium, of which only 0.2 percent was present as barium sulfate. This indicated a limit in concentration. Barium was also present in the gangue as a separate mineral, barite (BaSO4), which has approximately the same specific gravity as the manganese oxide."
Citation
APA:
(1942) RI 3632 Manganese Investigations - Metallurgical Division 13. Ore-Dressing Studies of Manganese Ores Concentration of Manganese-Bearing Ore from the Mayfield Property, Van Horn, TexasMLA: RI 3632 Manganese Investigations - Metallurgical Division 13. Ore-Dressing Studies of Manganese Ores Concentration of Manganese-Bearing Ore from the Mayfield Property, Van Horn, Texas. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1942.