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| Gold Recovery at Waihi: 1890 - 1952
Gold-bearing rock, known as ore, was mined from the quartz reefs deep underground in Martha Hill. It was hoisted to the surface and then taken eight kilometres to the treatment plant at Waikino by rake train on a specially built tram line. The site at Waikino was chosen because power was on hand from the Ohinemuri River. Later in 1913 electric power became available from Horahora, the mining company's own hydro-electric station on the Waikato River. |
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| The original open cut at the Martha Mine. A poppet head giving access to the underground workings can be seen at the top left of the picture. Junction Road is in the foreground. Junction Road is in the foreground. | ||||||||||||
| Crushing On arrival at the treatment plant the ore was tipped from the rake of railway trucks into a jaw crusher. This reduced the size of the ore to no larger than a cricket ball. Water was added and the mixture was pounded in a battery of heavy stamps until it was the consistency of beach sand. Next it was fed into a series of rotating horizontal cylinders called tube mills. Very hard Norwegian flint rock - and in a later development steel balls - ground the rock to a very fine powder |
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| Treatment After passing through the tube mills the mixture of pulverised ore and water was pumped into 15 metre tall cylindrical tanks called Brown Agitators. Sodium Cyanide was added. The slurry was kept moving by means of compressed air. After five days all of the precious metals had been dissolved by the cyanide solution. Filtering Precipitation Refining For more information about the geology of Martha Mine click here to link to the Martha Mine website or click here to link directly to the mine's page about geology. Both links will take you outside this site. Close the window to return. |
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