Abstract
EXCLUDING mechanical, smelting, and amalgamation processes, the methods of extracting gold from its ores may conveniently be grouped together under the heading of wet or chemical methods. In these, the gold is dissolved by some suitable solvent, and is then separated from the unaltered ore by washing, and recovered by precipitation. The processes owe their origin to the rapid advance in the science of chemistry which has been made during the present century, and, although they are now of vast importance, and give results which would astonish our grandfathers, it is, perhaps, somewhat surprising that chemistry has not done more for the gold-mining industry. At the present day, the wet methods produce little more than a tenth of the total output of gold, while mechanical improvements in the old processes, made during the last half-century, are probably answerable for four or five times as much.
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ROSE, T. The Extraction of Gold by Chemical Methods. Nature 55, 448–449 (1897). https://doi.org/10.1038/055448a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/055448a0