RI 4670 Flotation And Cyanidation Tests On A Gold-Copper Sulfide Ore From Cooke, Mont.

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
A. L. Engel
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
11
File Size:
552 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1950

Abstract

Many western ores containing ;old, silver, and copper can be mined and concentrated at a profit only when the recovery of those metals is high and treatment costs are low. Usually, ores containing easily dissolved copper minerals, or copper minerals that become soluble to some extent through oxidation during treatment, present a real problem in cyanidation. Copper cyanide compounds are formed that tend to 'precipitate and that cannot yield regenerated cyanide and metallic copper on contact with zinc. This results not only in some loss of copper through solution in cyanide, but in excessive consumption of cyanide above the amount required for the extraction of Gold and silver. Any moans, therefore, of minimizing the: loss of cyanide while at the same time effecting high recoveries of the several values contained in the ore is of wide interest. A sample of typical low-grade ore of gold, silver, and copper, containing copper-sulfide minerals, was obtained from the MacLaren Gold Mines Co., Cooke, Park County, Mont., for laboratory investigation by flotation and cyanidation.
Citation

APA: A. L. Engel  (1950)  RI 4670 Flotation And Cyanidation Tests On A Gold-Copper Sulfide Ore From Cooke, Mont.

MLA: A. L. Engel RI 4670 Flotation And Cyanidation Tests On A Gold-Copper Sulfide Ore From Cooke, Mont.. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1950.

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