Minas Ragra

Minas Ragra
Minas Ragra is located in Peru
Minas Ragra
Minas Ragra
Location
Pasco Region
CountryPeru
Production
ProductsVanadium
History
Opened1906
Closed1955

The Minas Ragra was a large vanadium mine in the Pasco Region of Peru. The deposit was discovered by a United States Geological Survey expedition on November 20. 1905.[1] Members of this expeditions were Donnel Foster Hewett and José J. Bravo In this deposit the mineral patrónite was first discovered by a member of the expedition Antenor Rizo-Patron.[2] A mine was established in very short time by the Vanadium Corporation of America. By 1914 75% of the world vanadium ore production was coming from the Minas Ragra in Peru, making the mine the world leading producer of vanadium.[3] With the production of vanadium as side product of uranium mining from carnotite the mine had to close in 1955.

See also

[edit]
  • Lluis Fontbote; G. Christian Amstutz; Miguel Cardozo; Esteban Cedillo; Jose Frutos (27 November 2013). Stratabound Ore Deposits in the Andes. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 595. ISBN 978-3-642-88282-1.
  • Trefzger, Erwin F. (1951). "Vanadium lagerstätte Mina Ragra in Peru". Berichte der Naturforschenden Gesellschaft zu Freiburg I. Br (in German). DWI.
  • Phillip Maxwell Busch (1961). Vanadium: A Materials Survey. U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Mines.
  • "The Story of Mina Ragra". Engineering and Mining Journal. McGraw Hill Publishing Company: 59. January 1947.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Hewett, Donnel Foster (1906). "A new occurrence of vanadium in Peru". Engineering and Mining Journal. 82 (9): 385.
  2. ^ Hillebrand, W. F. (1907). "The Vanadium Sulphide, Patronite, and ITS Mineral Associates from Minasragra, Peru". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 29 (7): 1019–1029. doi:10.1021/ja01961a006. ISSN 0002-7863.
  3. ^ Fischer, Siegfried (1914). "Uranium and Vanadium". Early Publications of the Lehigh Faculty (Paper 293).

10°51′34″S 76°34′19″W / 10.8595632°S 76.5720061°W / -10.8595632; -76.5720061