Carrie Everson
Carrie Everson | |
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Carrie Everson (born Rebecca Carrie Jane Billings; 27 August 1842–1914) invented and patented processes for extracting metals from ore using the flotation process.[1] The Mining Journal noted in 1916 that "as a metallurgist she was a quarter of a century in advance of her profession."[2]
Life
Everson was educated first in Massachusetts but she had been born in Illinois in 1842. She married a doctor, William K. Everson, in 1864. She patented her discovery that if you used fats or oils with an ore then the oils would stick to the metal and not the rock. On her lab bench she used this with gold, copper, antimony, and arsenic ores. She went on to contribute to another patent but never made any money from her discovery. Everson had a son and died in 1914. After the patent had expired others used her methods which she lived to appreciate if not to benefit from.[3] The Mining Journal noted in 1916 that "as a metallurgist she was a quarter of a century in advance of her profession."[2]
References
- ↑ Inventors and inventions, volume 2. New York: Marshall Cavendish. 2008. ISBN 9780761477648. Retrieved 8 June 2016.
- 1 2 "Carrie Jane Billings Everson". Mining Journal. 101: 3. 15 January 1916. Retrieved 8 June 2016.
- ↑ Everson, Mining Hall of Fame, Retrieved 16 June 2016
External links
- "Rebecca 'Carrie' Jane Billings Everson, Inventor" in Autobiography of a Tramp by John Lewis Everson