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Ch. 1: Gold and Silver in 1913

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874                           MINERAL RESOURCES, 1913—PART I.
ores, as in parts of Colorado and Arizona; or smelting ores. Tailings both from old dumps and from present milling are largely reworked by concentration and subsequent cyanidation. The all-sliming cyanidation method is also of increasing importance, and crushing is largely by tube mills as well as by stamp and gyratory mills.
The loss in tailings from gold mills is being constantly cut down and the most serious present loss is in tailings from concentrating
g iants. The chlorination process is of decreasing relative importance melting is mainly of concentrates and of siliceous and pyritic ores, which are also valuable as fluxes. Exact figures of relative output by methods will appear in detail by States in another table.
COPPER ORES.
The production of gold from the electrolytic refining of blister copper smelted from copper ores and concentrates sold or treated in 1913 was $5,097,855, against $5,424,047 in 1912 and $5,450,079 in 1911. Increase in gold output from these ores was made in 1913 in Arizona, California, and Nevada and decrease in Montana and Utah. States producing over $1,000,000 in gold from copper ores in 1913, as in 1912, were Utah and Arizona, in order named, followed by the important contributors of less than $1,000,000—Nevada, Montana, and California in 1913. The output of gold from copper ores in the United States has increased from 5.63 per cent of tho total gold yield from all sources in 1911 to 5.86 per cent in 1912, and to 6.39 per cent in 1913.
LEAD ORES.
The yield of gold from refining lead bullion produced from lead ores sold or treated in 1913 was $1,527,246, against $1,348,087 in 1912 and $1,201,606 in 1911. The Utah ores ranked first in output oi gold from this source, followed by those of Colorado, as in 1912 and 1011. The remainder of the gold yield from lead ores was chieily from Idaho, Nevada, Arizona, Montana, and California, in order given. Increases were noted for Utah, Colorado, and California in 1913, and decreases from other States named.
LEAD-ZINC, ZINC, AND OTHER ORES.
Production of gold from lead-zinc ores was $316,512 in 1913, against $258,177 in 1912, but the figures are not satisfactorily comparable for the reason that ores from Montana classed as zinc ores in 1912 produced both lead and zinc in 1913. The output from lead-zinc ores in 1913 was almost wholly from Utah, Colorado, Montana, and' Arizona. From zinc ores the gold production was $18,528 in 1913, against $100,898 in 1912, and was chiefly in 1913 from Arizona.
From copper-lead and copper-lead-zinc ores the gold output was $97,094 in 1913, against $47,538 in 1912, and was mainly from Nevada and Colorado.
DISTRIBUTION OP SILVER PRODUCTION OF 1913, BY SOURCES.
The mine production of silver from dry or siliceous ores, copper ores, and lead ores combined in 1913 was 91.15 per cent of the total
Ch. 1: Gold and Silver in 1913 Page of 115 Ch. 1: Gold and Silver in 1913
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US Geol. Surv. 1913. Gemstones, Metals.
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