RI 5462 Operations Of Manganese-Ore-Purchasing Depots At Deming, N. Mex., And Wenden, Ariz. ? Summary

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 22
- File Size:
- 1710 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1959
Abstract
Under terms of cooperative agreements, the Federal Bureau of Mines Inter-mountain Experiment Station assisted the General Services Administration (GSA) in operating the manganese-ore purchasing depots at Deming. N. Mex., and Wenden, Ariz. A resident metallurgist stationed at the depots directed sampling of the ore lots for assaying, took samples for amenability testing, calculated acceptances for payments to shippers, and served as technical adviser to the depot manager. The Intermountain Experiment Station at Salt Lake City, Utah, tested the amenability of the ores to determine how much of the manganese could be recovered in concentrates assaying a minimum of 40 percent manganese (Mn) and containing a maximum of 16 percent iron (Fe), 15 percent silica (Si02) plus alumina (AI203), 0.3 percent phosphorus (P), and I percent copper (Cu) plus lead (Pb) plus zinc (Zn). All chemical analyses of the ores and test products were done at Salt Lake City. In all, 567 ore lots submitted to the Deming depot were tested by flotation to determine their amenability to concentration into specification-grade material; 421 lots were amenable, and 146 were unamenable, primarily because of high copper content or excessive silica or iron in the flotation concentrate. Chemical analyses totaling 42,700 were made on the ores submitted to the Deming depot and on the products of the amenability-test program.
Citation
APA:
(1959) RI 5462 Operations Of Manganese-Ore-Purchasing Depots At Deming, N. Mex., And Wenden, Ariz. ? SummaryMLA: RI 5462 Operations Of Manganese-Ore-Purchasing Depots At Deming, N. Mex., And Wenden, Ariz. ? Summary. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1959.