RI 4097 Arizona Manganese-Silver Ores

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
T. M. Romslo S. F. Ravitz
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
15
File Size:
995 KB
Publication Date:
Jun 1, 1947

Abstract

During 1940 and 1941, the Bureau of Mines examined a large number of silver mines in Arizona for their potential as producers of manganese ores. Although very little manganese ore had been produced from these mines, it was generally known that manganese oxides in appreciable amounts were associated with the silver ore. Following the examinations, the Bureau further investigated some of the ore deposits by diamond drilling and other types of sampling. The results of these investigations, from the viewpoint of manganese, were discouraging. However, the investigations did indicate that appreciable tonnages of manganese-silver ores had been left in some of the mines by earlier operators. Most of these ores were too low-grade for direct shipping as ores of manganese or silver, and their beneficiation by ordinary processes was not economic. Exploitation of the ores appeared to be dependent upon the development of a low-cost milling method, which would yield a marketable manganese product and recover a high percentage of the silver. Later, the Bureau of Mines constructed an experimental mill at Salt Lake City, Utah, for the treatment of manganiferous ores by the dithionate process, designed to recover manganese as a high-grade product. The dithionate residues can be treated by other processes for the recovery of additional values that may be present in the ore. This development focused attention on the manganese-silver ores of Arizona and led to setting up Bureau project No. 370, which is the subject of this report.
Citation

APA: T. M. Romslo S. F. Ravitz  (1947)  RI 4097 Arizona Manganese-Silver Ores

MLA: T. M. Romslo S. F. Ravitz RI 4097 Arizona Manganese-Silver Ores. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1947.

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