The Recovery of Scheelite Concentrate at Hollinger Tungsten Mill During 1942

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
John Blackshaw
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
31
File Size:
9378 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1943

Abstract

NEW sources of supply of tungsten concentrates became necessary when the flow from the Far East was blocked in 1942. In Canada, one source has been noted in the workings of the Hollinger mine at Timmins, Ontario. For many years, a small amount of scheelite had been removed with the gold ore, and an appreciable tonnage of scheelite still remained in the mine. At the request of the Dominion Government, a plant was built to recover this scheelite in the form of a concentrate that could be used by the alloy-steel industry without further preparation. The plant began operating early in March, 1942, and a small tonnage of ore, carrying scheelite and gold values, has been treated daily since then. The possibility of recovering the scheelite had been considered on several previous occasions. Each time the proposal had been given up because the total profits from the enterprise were estimated to be insufficient to repay the capital cost of building the recovery plant. At the time the plant was built, additional information had been gathered about the tonnage and grade of the scheelite ore in the mine, and several thousand tons of ore grading higher than 0. 25 per cent WO3 (tungstic trioxide) were known to be available.
Citation

APA: John Blackshaw  (1943)  The Recovery of Scheelite Concentrate at Hollinger Tungsten Mill During 1942

MLA: John Blackshaw The Recovery of Scheelite Concentrate at Hollinger Tungsten Mill During 1942. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1943.

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