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textbook. Basic description is attempted, and the bibliography has
been specifically chosen to guide the reader toward a fuller
treatment of his special ised interests. No fully satisfactory term
has yet emerged to describe the processing of minerals, which is
also called "ore dressing," "mineral dressing," "mineral
engineering" and, in the University of London degree course
"mineral technology." The dressing of ores was an excellent
description of the older processes which aimed to break down rock
to appropriate sizes, grade it, and separate the heavy fraction
from the light one in each grade or size by gravity methods. The
work done in the mill today goes far beyond these simple
operations, and requires some knowledge of physical chemistry,
particularly the branches which deal with the physics and chemistry
of surfaces and of the interphase between solid particle and the
surrounding liquid. At the same time, the engineer must not become
so absorbed in the study of fundamental and applied technology as a
physico-chemical science that he overlooks the mechanical,
economic, and humanistic aspects oli his work. He is an engineer, a
chemist, a physicist, and an administrator and, as such, should
have a sound scientifj. c and cultural education. Technically, his
work is to extract the valuable minerals from the ore sent to his
mill; economically, it is to balance all the financial costs and
returns in such a way as to ensure the maximum profit from the
operation."
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