James Douglas Medal Awarded S. G. Blaylock
    
    - Organization:
 - The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
 - Pages:
 - 1
 - File Size:
 - 138 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jan 2, 1928
 
Abstract
SELWYN G. BLAYLOCK, who has been awarded the Douglas medal for 1927 for his achievements in the production of electrolytic zinc and the treating of complex lead, zinc and silver ore at the Sullivan mine, British Columbia, is a Canadian and one of the notable men who have come from McGill Uni-versity, where he graduated in 1899. As the medal was founded in 1922 by a group of James Douglas' friends to honor the memory of that distinguished Canadian metallurgist, who was an honorary LL.D. of McGill, it is extremely appropriate that it should be awarded to another Canadian metallurgist and McGill graduate, who has been notably successful in practice.  Immediately after gradua-  tion Mr. Blaylock obtained a  position as chemist at the  Trail smelter and two years  later was made chief chemist  and metallurgist. In 1907 he  became superintendent of the  Hall mines smelter and after  a year became superintendent  of the St. Eugene mine at  Moyie. While there he was  responsible for the purchase  of the Sullivan mine and the  use of methods of mining,  especially sorting, which so  improved the relative per- -  centages of zinc and lead in   the ore as to make it better  material for blast-furnace  smelting. The losses in zinc,  both from sorting out and in  the lead blast-furnace slag  made a deep impression on  him, and various methods of  water concentration and the  use of air-jigs and flotation to  increase the recovery were  tried under Mr. Blaylock's   supervision as early as 1910. These were followed by experiments with direct fusion, volatilization in kilns, sulfite processes, and one similar to the Ashcroft proc-ess. In 1914 experiments were made with roasting, leaching, and electrolyzing the resultant zinc sulfate solution; the following year a plant was built at Tadanac which has been in successful operation since 1916, its capacity having been increased by successive steps to 275 tons of zinc per day. Experimental work continued on the feed for the zinc plant and a 150-ton mill to use the Horwood process was constructed, but as the results were not encouraging it was altered to wet magnetic concentration, which was successful and the plant was later increased in capacity to 600 tons per day. Meanwhile experiments with differential flota-tion showed promise and magnetic concentration was continued while flotation was developed to where it could be put into operation parallel to the magnetic plant. This flotation plant, started in 1920, was so successful that eventually the magnetic separation plant was abandoned. Lead smelting conditions at Trail were difficult on account of the necessity of mak-ing slags containing as much as 20 per cent zinc and because of the high percentage of fine flotation con-centrate. The improvements in sintering and smelt-ing made under Mr. Blaylock's direction have been notable. The Betts electrolytic refining process for lead was first used at Trail, and the plant has been brought to its present highly developed and efficient state under Mr. Blaylock's direction. The first com-mercial Cottrell plant in connection with lead smelt-ing was also built there. The capacity of the Tada-nac plant is now approximately 750 tons per day of  refined metal, including lead,  zinc, copper, antimony, cad-  mium, gold and silver. All the  work necessary for this nota-  ble development has neces-  sarily been the work of many  hands, directed by Mr. Blay-  lock. In 1924 he was awarded  the McCharles Medal by  the University of Toronto  for his achievements in con-  nection with the production  of electrolytic zinc and the  solving of the difficulty of  treating the complex lead-  zinc-silver ore of the Sullivan  mine, and developing it from  a small producer to one of the  most important mines of the  world, now producing 150,000  tons of lead and 90,000 tons  of zinc annually. Having spent  all his professional life in one  remote place, Mr. Blaylock is  relatively little known per-sonally to others of his pro-fession, and the award indi-cates the truth in Emerson's well known epigram about the mouse-trap.
Citation
APA: (1928) James Douglas Medal Awarded S. G. Blaylock
MLA: James Douglas Medal Awarded S. G. Blaylock. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1928.