Copy of `Historic Sites - Mining terminology`
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Historic Sites - Mining terminology
Category: Agriculture and Industry > Mining glossary
Date & country: 10/11/2016, USA Words: 32
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windlassA device, smaller than a whim, used to raise ore from a shaft.
winzeA vertical or inclined opening sunk from a point inside a mine.
whimA winding machine used for hoisting ore out of a shaft.
wasteRock containing no ore but removed in the course of mining operations.
veinAn opening, fissure, or crack in rock, containing mineralized material.
tailingsFinely ground particles of ore deposited as waste after processing by a mill or smelter.
stopeAn excavation created by the removal of ore and consequent widening of the drift.
retortA vessel in which substances are distilled or decomposed by heat.
rockerA device for washing gold-bearing earth to recover the precious metal.
shaftA vertical entrance to a mine cut downward from the surface.
square setA set of timbers used for support in underground mining.
stamp millA machine for crushing ore by the weight of constantly falling pieces of iron, stone, or wood. The action approximates the pulverizing of material with a mortar and pestle.
mineralA substance which may, or may not, be of economic value, that occurs naturally in the earth. It is homogenous, has certain chemical makeup and usually appears in crystal or grain form.
oreA mixture of minerals and gangue from which at least one of the minerals can be extracted at a profit.
panA shallow metal dish used for washing earth and stones to separate the gold.
placerAn alluvial or glacial deposit containing particles of gold or other valuable minerals.
hanging wallThe wall or rock on the upper or topside of an ore deposit.
kibbleIron Cornish bucket used to hoist ore and miners to the surface.
levelHorizontal passageways or tunnels in the mine leading from shafts, established at regular intervals.
lodeAn ore deposit occurring in place within definite boundaries separating it from the adjoining rocks.
metamorphismA pronounced change in the constitution of rock effected by pressure, heat, and water that results in a more compact and more highly crystalline condition.
gangueThe worthless rock in a vein which holds valuable metals.
geologyThe science or study of rocks in the earth.
crosscutA horizontal tunnel driven perpendicular to the main direction of a vein.
driftAn underground tunnel which follows the course of a vein.
footwallThe wall or rock on the underside of a stope.
galleryA drift which has been enlarged into an underground room by the extraction of ore.
amalgamationThe technique of using mercury to attract small particles of crushed gold and join with them in an amalgam, or alloy. Gold may be recovered by distilling off the mercury.
arrastraA mill, consisting of one or more large stones dragged around on a circular bed, used to grind ore.
chilean millA machine, somewhat like the arrastra, in which heavy stone wheels turn about a central shaft and crush ore.
cornish pumpA type of pump developed in Cornwall, England, and commonly used in deep mines of the nineteenth century to raise underground water.
aditAn entrance to a mine, generally a horizontal tunnel.