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AMERICAN MINING HALL OF FAME

2000 INDUCTEE FROM MINING’S PAST

   

James Colquhoun

1857 - 1954

James Colquhoun may be the least acknowledged and appreciated minerals industry titan in American mining history. Born in England and educated mainly in Scotland and Ireland, Colquhoun (pronounced “Coh-hoon”) left Glasgow at age 25 to fill a position with the Scottish-owned “Arizona Copper Company" (ACC) at Clifton in Territorial Arizona. Beginning with the ACC as an assayer, his talents and interests swiftly propelled him into superintendency of metallurgy, and then to General Manager of ACC Morenci operations.

With the ACC in serious cost/profit trouble, Colquhoun proposed a plan to “concentrate and leach the low-grade porphyry ore of the Metcalf...”. He devised, designed, and built an acid plant to convert pyrite to sulfuric acid for batch-leaching oxide copper ores, a 100 tpd gravity-jig riffle-slurry table plant to concentrate the oxide minerals, and a leaching plant to extract the copper. Production began in November 1893 and was so successful that Company profits increased 1000% from 1893 to 1896, and quadrupled again by 1903. This oxide-mineral success led Colquhoun to try concentrating and leaching low-grade chalcocite ores. In June 1896, a gravity-based sulfide concentrator was completed and, in its first six months, produced 30,000 tons of concentrates running 40% copper, with tailings at 1.25% copper. Thus, “porphyry copper” production was initiated by James Colquhoun at Morenci, 12 years before the 1905 date marking the start-up at Bingham Canyon, often called the first “porphyry copper” mining operation.

After his Morenci years, Colquhoun accepted a position with the Caucasus Copper Company, in the current Republic of Georgia, rehabilitating mines that were captured, looted, and disabled by the Turks during World War I. The Bolshevik Revolution in 1917 forced closure of the mines, and Mr. Colquhoun survived a harrowing 73-day escape with his staff, retiring to England at age 60. 

James Colquhoun made massive and profoundly significant contributions to the American, European, and world mining scene as an assayer, geologist, metallurgist, mining engineer, inventor, and manager. He was the innovator and instigator of several major processes still in use in large-scale “porphyry copper” districts around the world, and was among the first to have realized profits at those mining and extraction scales. He is a true hero of American mining.

 

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