Wills' Mineral Processing Technology: An Introduction to the Practical Aspects of Ore Treatment and Mineral Recovery, Seventh Edition

Ore handling, which may account for 30 60% of the total delivered price of raw materials, covers the processes of transportation, storage, feeding, and washing of the ore en route to, or during, its various stages of treatment in the mill.
Since the physical state of ores in situ may range from friable, or even sandy material, to monolithic deposits with the hardness of granite, the methods of mining and provisions for the handling of freshly excavated material will vary extremely widely. Ore that has been well broken can be transported by trucks, belts, or even by sluicing, but large lumps of hard ore may need individual blasting. Modern developments in microsecond delay fuses and plastic explosive have resulted in more controllable primary breakage and easier demolition of occasional very large lumps. At the same time, crushers have become larger and lumps up to 2 m in size can now be fed into some primary units.
Open-pit ore tends to be very heterogeneous, the largest lumps often being over 1.5 m in diameter. The broken ore from the pit, after blasting, is loaded directly into trucks, holding up to 200 t of ore in some cases, and is transported directly to the primary crushers. Storage of such ore is not always practicable, due to its "long-ranged" particle size which causes segregation during storage, the fines working their way down through the voids between the larger particles; extremely coarse ore is sometimes difficult to start moving once it has...