Borax method
The borax method is a technique of artisanal gold mining, which uses borax as a flux to purify gold concentrates. By using borax, no mercury flour is produced, hence gold recovery increases.
The borax method of gold extraction has been used by artisanal gold miners in the Benguet area north of Manila in the Philippines for more than 30 years. Some believe it was in practice as early as the 1900s. The method is increasingly being seen as a safe alternative to the widespread use of toxic mercury in artisanal gold mining today. About 30% of the world's mercury emissions comes from small scale mining. Efforts are being made to revive the method and spread its use. Presently around 15,000 artisanal gold miners in a small area of Luzon, the main island in the northern portion of the Philippines, use this method exclusively. The mineral is inexpensive and easily available, and the miners have reportedly found that more gold is recovered through its use.
Although said that borax can replace mercury, actually it does not occur. Borax is used alone only when gold concentrates are up from 25% from the mixture used.[1]
See also
Notes
References
- Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland. The Borax Method (PDF).
- Appel, Peter W. U.; Leoncio Na-Oy (2012-06-28). "The Borax Method of Gold Extraction for Small-Scale Miners". Blacksmith Institute Journal of Health and Pollution 2 (3). doi:10.5696/jhp.v2i3.48. ISSN 2156-9614. Retrieved 2012-10-04.
External links
- Video of the borax method