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Conference Proceedings

The AusIMM Proceedings 1903

Conference Proceedings

The AusIMM Proceedings 1903

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Paper No. 128. The Rise And Fall of Dry Crushing on The Hauraki Goldfield.

n the early days of the Hauraki goldfield (1866 to 1889) almost the only system of ore treatment was wet crushing followed by copper plate amalgamation. A further saving of bullion was in most cases obtained from the tailings by means of pans or berdans. Though this system was not always as efficient as might have been desired it answered fairly well for the bulk of the gold-bearing quartz of the Thames and Coromandel districts, where the gold occurs chiefly in the form of visible particles, and there is not a great deal of silver. It failed, however, with most of the ore found in the Upper Thames or Ohinemuri district, especially in the Karangahake and Waihi portions of the field. In those days the cyanide process was not, and the usual prescription of the mining " expert" was smelting. At Karangahake, many attempts were made to discover a payable method of treatment for the so-called" refractory" ore, but on thewhole with very 'little success, and the district struggled along for a number of years without adding very materially to the production of gold in New Zealand. At Waihi, the Martha Co.'s stamp battery treated by wet crushing and copper plate amalgamation some 18,000 tons from the Martha Reef, worth probablyat least 4 per ton, but the average return was considerably less than 1 per ton, a sum which barely paid working, expenses, and consequently the shareholders were glad...
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  • Paper No. 128. The Rise And Fall of Dry Crushing on The Hauraki Goldfield.
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  • Published: 1902
  • PDF Size: 1.011 Mb.
  • Unique ID: P_PROC1903_0083

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