2007-01-032022-02-032007-01-032022-02-03https://hdl.handle.net/11124/8712Kodachrome Stereo Transparencies.Vanadium/uranium. Naturita Mill and coal mine 8/53--Verso of mount.Cardboard mount; text on front and verso of mount.Date scanned: 2001-05-29.Held in the National Mining Hall of Fame and Museum.Identifier: NMHFM-288.Related slides, stereopair slides and photographs: NMHFM-85, NMHFM-111, NMHFM-281, NMHFM-289, NMHFM-291, NMHFM-327, NMHFM-328, NMHFM-329, NMHFM-330, NMHFM-331, NMHFM-332, NMHFM-333, NMHFM-334, NMHFM-335.Donor: Lola Alexander.Stereopair slide showing the Naturita Processing Plant in the foreground and a coal mine on the hillside in the background. The Naturita Processing Plant was located three miles north of the town of Naturita and was built around 1930 by the Rare Metals Company. In 1939, the Vanadium Corporation of America purchased the plant and renovated it. Between 1942 and 1960, uranium was extracted at the plant from carnotite ore by salt roasting crushed ore and then leaching and precipitating the uranium concentrate (yellow cake) and vanadium concentrate (red cake). The carnotite ore processed at the plant probably came from the Vanadium Corporation of America's mines in the region. During the 1950s, the Vanadium Corporation of America also trucked several hundred tons of autunite ore to the Naturita Processing Plant for metallurgical tests.Rights management statement available at: http://library.mines.edu/digital/rights.htmlVanadium Corporation of AmericaCoal mines and miningScenes, desertUranium ore processing plantsVanadium ore processing plantsNaturita Processing PlantStillImage