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EXTRACTION OF GOLD BY ZINC.

(Saa Francisco Bulletin.) B. D'Heureuse of this city lias jns) patented a process of extracting gold with zinc. Ills circulars, which are extensively circulated at the Fair, contain the following statements concerning his invention. He says; —“When we fairly examine the retentive faculty of quicksilver for gold, we find it very limited indeed ; that the affinity acts only on perfectly pure surface ol both—a minority of cases, in reality—and that a reduction in temperature so greatly reduces the affinity that it hardly exists below a temperature ol 45° Fahr. The result is that, on an average, only one-half, or thereabouts, of the gold is extracted by quicksilver from the ore ; the rest is either carried away as float gold by the water required for the batteries, or remains in the tailings. This fact, known to every intelligent operator, should alone be sufficient to point out the imperative necessity of devising other extracting agents for that great majority of ore, containing more than siO or $25 per too ; but not rich enough to j leave a profit by direct chlorination, j Concentration of the sulphurets for; chlorination involves a great loss in float gold. Many localities with rich quartz viens have insufficient water for batteries within convenient distance, and for the greater part of tin year the ore has to be hauled long distances, with a heavy expenditure, to a mill-site with water, or the mine must be abandoned and lie idle. Therefore, what is required is an extracting agent that does the work complete, cheaper than chlorine, and requiring no water to reduce the ore, except such as is needed for the engine. Zinc, of all substances in existence —chlorine not excepted—has the greatest affinity to gold. Its action, a melted state, on gold, is to instantaneously absolve the same in any proportion. Its specific gravity (about 7) is sufficiently high to float ail debris, not excepting sulphurets of iron, the companion of gold. It melts at a comparatively low temperature, and

requires but little heat to retain its melted state. It is sufficiently volatile to permit of retorting, as in the use of quicksilver, but by a covered surface and a temperature below a dark-red heat, the loss by volatization and burning is hardly appreciable, while the metal is obtained at a low price and in any quantity required. Thus we have in zinc a material manageable aud fulfilling the conditions required of a gold-extracting agent in a high degree —higher than any other known,” The process invented by him consists simply in gradually introducing the gold-bearing pulverized substance, below the surface, into a bath of melted zinc, which will immediately attack and dissolve nearly or every particle of gold, while the debris rises to the surface to be taken off. The mechanism is very simple and durable. Should sulphurets, in which particles of gold are so firmly imbeded as not to offer any contact even on the smallest point, prevent the extraction to such a degree that it will pay to work it over by concentration, roasting and chlorination, it may be done. But all the gold lost in another manner, as float gold and much more, is certainly already saved by the zinc. Dry crushers to be used in preference

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HBT18681105.2.20

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Hawke's Bay Times, Volume XIV, Issue 627, 5 November 1868, Page 4

Word count
Tapeke kupu
548

EXTRACTION OF GOLD BY ZINC. Hawke's Bay Times, Volume XIV, Issue 627, 5 November 1868, Page 4

EXTRACTION OF GOLD BY ZINC. Hawke's Bay Times, Volume XIV, Issue 627, 5 November 1868, Page 4

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