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Extracting Tin from Cassiterite — Panning and Smelting Tin Ore
English
Peter

Created by

Peter

22. སྤྱི་ཟླ་བཞི་པ 2026SE
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Extracting Tin from Cassiterite — Panning and Smelting Tin Ore

How to find, pan, and smelt cassiterite (SnO₂) to obtain metallic tin. Cassiterite is the primary ore of tin, containing approximately 78.8% tin by mass. Tin was one of the first metals smelted by humans (around 3000 BCE) and is essential for making bronze (copper + tin alloy). Covers alluvial panning, ore concentration, and charcoal reduction smelting.
མཐོ་རིམ
6-8 hours

Instructions

1

Understand cassiterite

Cassiterite (SnO₂) is tin dioxide, the principal ore of tin. It has a Mohs hardness of 6-7, a very high specific gravity of 6.8-7.1 (much heavier than common sand at 2.6), and ranges from black to reddish-brown in color. The high density makes it easy to separate by gravity (panning), similar to gold panning.

2

Find alluvial cassiterite

Cassiterite is found as heavy black or dark brown grains in alluvial (stream) deposits downstream from tin-bearing granite. Look in stream gravels, inside bends of rivers where heavy minerals concentrate, and behind large boulders. Historical tin regions include Cornwall (UK), Southeast Asia, Bolivia, and central Africa.

3

Collect stream gravel

Shovel gravel and sand from locations where heavy minerals accumulate: bedrock crevices, behind boulders, and the inside of river bends. Fill a bucket with raw gravel. The cassiterite grains are small (1-5 mm) and mixed with ordinary sand, quartz, and other minerals.

Materials for this step:

Stream GravelStream Gravel20 kilogram

Tools needed:

Digging ShovelDigging Shovel
20-Liter Bucket20-Liter Bucket
4

Pan for cassiterite

Use a gold pan or wide shallow bowl. Add a scoop of gravel and fill halfway with water. Swirl and tilt to wash away light material. Heavy cassiterite grains sink to the bottom center. Continue washing until only black heavy grains remain. This is identical to gold panning technique.

Tools needed:

Gold Pan or Shallow BowlGold Pan or Shallow Bowl
5

Identify cassiterite grains

Cassiterite grains are: black to dark reddish-brown, very heavy (noticeably heavier than quartz), have a brilliant adamantine (diamond-like) luster when scratched, and a white to pale brown streak. Magnetite (another heavy black mineral) is magnetic — test with a magnet to separate it from cassiterite.

Tools needed:

Magnet (for separating magnetite)Magnet (for separating magnetite)
Hand Lens (10x)Hand Lens (10x)
6

Concentrate the ore

Repeat panning until you have a concentrate of mostly cassiterite. Use the magnet to remove any magnetite grains. You need at least 500 g of clean cassiterite concentrate for a worthwhile smelt. From 20 kg of gravel in a good tin-bearing stream, expect 100-500 g of concentrate.

7

Dry the concentrate

Spread the cassiterite concentrate on a flat surface in the sun to dry completely. Wet ore in a hot crucible causes dangerous steam explosions. Drying takes 2-4 hours in direct sunlight. The dry concentrate should feel gritty and pour freely.

8

Prepare the crucible and charcoal

Use a clay or graphite crucible that can withstand 1200°C. Mix the dry cassiterite with an equal volume of powdered charcoal. The charcoal provides carbon for reduction: SnO₂ + 2C → Sn + 2CO₂. Tin melts at only 232°C, far below the smelting temperature, so it collects as liquid at the bottom.

Materials for this step:

Powdered CharcoalPowdered Charcoal500 gram
Clay Crucible (refractory)Clay Crucible (refractory)1 piece
9

Set up the forge

Place the loaded crucible in a charcoal forge with bellows. Tin smelting requires lower temperature than copper or iron — about 1000-1200°C is sufficient for reduction. Pack charcoal around and above the crucible. Put on safety equipment: leather apron, face shield, leather gloves.

Materials for this step:

Charcoal for ForgeCharcoal for Forge10 kilogram

Tools needed:

Bellows or Air BlowerBellows or Air Blower
Leather ApronLeather Apron
Face ShieldFace Shield
10

Smelt for 1-2 hours

Pump the bellows to bring the forge to operating temperature. Maintain heat for 1-2 hours. The cassiterite reduces to metallic tin which, being liquid above 232°C, pools at the bottom of the crucible below a layer of slag and ash. Tin smelting is one of the easiest metal reductions.

11

Pour the molten tin

Using crucible tongs, lift the crucible from the forge. Carefully pour the contents into a preheated sand or stone mold. The heavy molten tin pours first (bottom of crucible), followed by lighter slag. Tin is silvery-white when molten and solidifies quickly due to its low melting point.

Tools needed:

Crucible TongsCrucible Tongs
Sandstone Ingot MoldSandstone Ingot Mold
12

Cool and extract the ingot

Tin solidifies within minutes. Once cool, remove the ingot from the mold. The tin ingot will be covered with a thin layer of slag — break this off by tapping. Clean tin is silvery-white and very soft — you can scratch it with a fingernail (Mohs hardness 1.5).

13

Verify it is tin

Tin has distinctive properties: bending a tin bar produces an audible crackling sound called 'tin cry' caused by crystal twinning. It is very soft (scratched by a coin), silvery-white, and does not rust. When heated, it melts easily at 232°C — far below a candle flame temperature.

14

Weigh and record yield

Weigh the clean tin ingot. From 500 g of good cassiterite concentrate, expect 300-350 g of metallic tin (60-70% yield). Record the source location, concentrate weight, smelt time, and tin yield. This tin is ready for alloying with copper to make bronze, or for tinplating, soldering, and pewterwork.

Tools needed:

Kitchen ScaleKitchen Scale

Materials

4

Tools Required

11

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