An arrastra in California, 1866
Arrastra demonstration in Liberty, Washington

An Arrastra (or Arastra) is a primitive mill for grinding and pulverizing (typically) gold or silver ore. The simplest form of the arrastra was a flat-bottomed drag stone placed in a circular, flagstone-lined pit and connected to a center post by a long arm. With a horse, mule or human providing power at the other end of the arm, the stone was dragged slowly around in a circle, crushing the ore. [1]

Arrastras were widely used throughout the Mediterranean region since Phoenician times. [2]The Spanish introduced the arrastra to the New World in the 1500's. The word arrastra comes from the Spanish language arrastre, meaning to drag along the ground. [1] Arrastras were suitable for use in small or remote mines, since they could be built from local materials and required little investment capital. [1][3]

For gold ore, the gold is typically recovered by amalgamation with quicksilver. The miner would add clean mercury to the ground ore, continue grinding, rinse out the fines, then add more ore and repeat the process. At cleanup, the gold amalgam was carefully recovered from from the low places and crevices in the arrastra floor. The amalgam was then roasted in a retort to recover the gold, and the mercury saved for reuse. [3]

For silver ore, the patio process, invented in Mexico in 1554, was generally used to recover the silver from ore ground in the arrastra.

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c Arrastra
  2. ^ The "Poor Man's Mill", 2004, Journal of the Society of Industrial Archaeology
  3. ^ a b What is an Arrastra?
edit