Road Transportation for the Mineral Industry

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
A. O. Dufresne
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
4
File Size:
2187 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1956

Abstract

WITHOUT transportation, mining would be quite impossible. Any person familiar with the operation of a mine knows full well that from the minute ore is blasted, it is kept moving until it reaches the treatment plant. In the mill, by means of conveyors and elevators, the ore is brought from receiving bins to one machine after another until finally its valuable mineral is separated from the gangue. The finished product must then be shipped -either by boat, rail, or motor trucks to industrial centres, where it undergoes further treatment and transformation into finished commercial goods. Everybody appreciates that the winning of an or-e includes, amongst various operations, the moving of large quantities of material of generally low value. Transportation, therefore, must be considered One of the most important factors in the economics of mining. My assignment, this afternoon, is not to treat of that phase of transportation as it directly affects mining operations, but rather to consider some of the aspects of overland transportation and its influence in bringing about the development of mining camps in Canada. I shall take the liberty of rapidly surveying conditions facing prospectors, mine developers and operators from the time a region is still in a pre-pioneering stage until such time as a mine starts shipping its concentrates.
Citation

APA: A. O. Dufresne  (1956)  Road Transportation for the Mineral Industry

MLA: A. O. Dufresne Road Transportation for the Mineral Industry. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1956.

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