Shaker-Concentrator - New Almaden, CA, USA
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member saopaulo1
N 37° 10.405 W 121° 49.573
10S E 604202 N 4114756
One of a group of ten interpretive signs at the Quicksilver County Park erected by California State Society Daughters of the American Revolution.
Waymark Code: WM184Q4
Location: California, United States
Date Posted: 05/29/2023
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Crazy4horses
Views: 3

The Shaker-Concentrator and the interpretive sign are located in the overflow parking area of the county park. The Shaker-Concentrator was used to sort ore that was mined from the mines. The county park was also a former mine. The former mining equipment is from the Guadalupe Mine and was donated by Guadalupe Rubbish Company.
DAR Chapter: The California State Society Daughters of the American Revolution

Inscription:
The shaker-concentrator, also known as a shaker table, was used in gravity beneficiation (the concentration of ore) for sorting fine-grained materials, such as heavy cinnabar, from ordinary rock and dust particles. The beneficiation process was carried out on the surface of the shaker bed, which has a slight tilt. The particles to be separated were fed into the shaker from a trough above the bed. At the same time water was applied to the bed from a tank (or simply a garden hose). Due to combination of gravity, inertia, friction and horizontal flow of water, the particles were stratified according to weight and size; heavier material (in the case of cinnabar) moved slower that lighter material, and thus the material were separated. The exact use of this concentrator from the Guadalupe mine is not known. Concentrators were sometimes used to separate free mercury from the dust captured in the cyclone collector at the output of the rotary furnace or heavy cinnabar from the dust of crushed rock. Old dump rock discarded by miners in the 1800’s was, in their opinion, low-grade ore. In the 1900’s the low-grade rock was considered valuable. The crushing of old dump rock and the concentration of fine rock was often tried, but with mixed results. After 1942, hand sorting and roasting the old rock in rotary furnaces proved to be more economical.

The California State Society Daughters of the American Revolution


Date Placed: Not listed

Visit Instructions:
- Please provide a photo you have taken of the monument or memorial clearly showing the DAR Marker.

- And please write a little about your visit to the site. Tell us what you thought, did you like it?
Search for...
Geocaching.com Google Map
Google Maps
MapQuest
Bing Maps
Nearest Waymarks
Nearest Daughters of the American Revolution
Nearest Geocaches
Create a scavenger hunt using this waymark as the center point
Recent Visits/Logs:
There are no logs for this waymark yet.