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Ch. 1: Gold and Silver in 1906

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GOLD AND SILVER.                                             133
silver milling ores, and explains why the rise in value during the last few years has failed to increase the production greatly. Nevada
p roduced nearly 6,500,000 ounces of silver from siliceous ores, chiefly from Tonopah, but even these contain 1 part of gold to 3 parts of silver, by value. The Colorado production closely approaches the figures for Nevada; but here again most of it came either from mixed ores, either pyritic or siliceous, which are concentrated and smelted, and which also contain lead, copper, or gold, or from the gold-silver ores, partly free milling, from the Gilpin or San Juan regions. Mon­tana has in Granite County a district of purely silver ores, but the yield from this source fell off in 1906, the largest quantity of silver in Montana being derived from Butte copper ores; the output of the State from siliceous ores is a little over 1,250,000 ounces. Arizona comes next with almost 600,000 ounces, but in no other State does the quantity reach half a million ounces.
The silver is recovered from siliceous ores by amalgation or cyanide processes; from smelting ores by desilverization of lead bullion or by electrolytic refining of copper.
Copper ores.—From copper ores 15,880,870 fine ounces were recov­ered; the smallness of the increase over 1905, in spite of heavily increased tonnage, is explained by the low tenor of the copper ores in silver. The States rank as follows: Montana, Utah, Arizona, Cal­ifornia, Idaho, and Colorado. Montana yielded nearly 10,000,000 ounces, the largest silver production in any State from any one kind of ore. This represents a decrease of about 100,000 ounces from the output of 1905 in spite of heavily increased tonnage. Arizona, from a very heavy tonnage, produced only 1,750,000 ounces. Utah, from a very much smaller tonnage, reported over 2,000,000 ounces. None of the other States reached the 1,000,000-ounce mark. The extrac­tion of gold and silver per ton from the ores of the principal copper camps runs approximately as follows:
Yield of gold and silver per ton of copper ore from the principal copper camps, in 1906,
in fine ounces.
Copper ores shipped from the Coeur d'Alene district yielded a nota­ble addition of silver to the production of Idaho, which for this class of ore was nearly 600,000 ounces. The silver from California cop­per ores was nearly doubled in 1906, owing to greatly increased activity in Shasta County, and approached 800,000 ounces.
About 85 per cent of the silver-bearing copper ores of the West are now sulphides. Oxidized ores are still contributed by Arizona, New Mexico, Idaho, and other States.
Lead ores.—The lead ores have always been one of the most impor­tant sources of silver, but a decided declining tendency in the output has been noted during the last few years. The total is
Ch. 1: Gold and Silver in 1906 Page of 77 Ch. 1: Gold and Silver in 1906
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US Geol. Surv. 1906. Gemstones, Metals.
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