Lead Smelting and Refining by Walter Renton Ingalls (9780217007504)
Walter Renton Ingalls Release Date: 10 December 0140 Format: Paperback Pages: 172 Publisher: General Books ISBN: 9780217007504 ISBN-10: 0217007503
Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: MINING IN SOUTHEASTERN MISSOURI By Walter Renton Ingalls (February 18, 1904) The St. Joseph Lead Company, in the operation of its mines at Bonne Terre, does not permit the cages employed for hoisting purposes to be used for access to the mine. Men going to and from their work must climb the ladders. This rule does not obtain in the other mines of the district. The St. Joseph Lead Company employs electric haulage for the transport of ore underground at Bonne Terre. In the other mines of the district, mules are generally used. The flow of water in the mines of the district is extremely variable; some have very little; others have a good deal. The Central mine is one of the wettest in the entire district, making about 2000 gal. of water per minute. Coal in southeastern Missouri costs $2 to $2.25 per ton delivered at the mines, and the cost of raising 2000 gal. of water per minute from a depth of something like 350 ft. is a very considerable item in the cost of mining and milling, which, in the aggregate, is expected to come to not much over $1.25 per ton. The ore shoots in the district are unusually large. Their precise trend has not been identified. Some consider the predominance of trend to be northeast; others, northwest. They go both ways, and appear to make the greatest depositions of ore at their intersections. However, the network of shoots, if that be the actual occurrence, is laid out on a very grand scale. Vertically there is also a difference. Some shafts penetrate only one stratum of ore; others, two or three. The orebody may be only a few feet in thickness; it may be 100 ft. or more. The occurrence of several overlying orebodies obviously indicates the mineralization of different strata of limestone, while in the very thick orebodies the whole zone has appare...