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MacArthur Forrest Process
Developed in 1887 by
two Glaswegian doctors, Robert and William Forrest, and a chemist, John S.
MacArthur.
This
cyanide process became the basis of most gold
extraction, especially in South Africa whose gold mining industry might
not have expanded so soon without it.
In the MacArthur Forrest Process, the ore is crushed to a fine powder and
circulated through tanks containing a weak solution of
cyanide,
which has an affinity for gold. The solution dissolves the gold and
the remaining rock pulp is filtered off. Zinc dust added to the
cyanide
solution to replace the gold causes the fine specks of gold to be
precipitated out and the precipitate is then
refined.
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