An ore vein is a crack or crevice in a rock where minerals can be found.
lode
Lode
vein
That would be referred to as a vein, or if a valuable mineral, an ore vein.
"Ore" is a mixture of some kind of metal that you are trying to extract, and the rock that is generally mixed in with it.
The metal in rocks is metal ore. Copper ore, iron ore, and so on. In general, once the ore has been quarried or mined, the ore is crushed and smelted (heated to a high temperature) allowing the now molten metal to be retrieved. The waste rock is dumped. Further processing is needed to obtain a finished metal in as pure a state as possible.
iron-ore
Seam
What is th see energy source for a vein of ore that is formed underground
vein
theydon't make it they dig it out of the grounddexteroo: let's explain this with a copper vein: miner finds copper vein, mines, gets ore, smelts, gets copper bar, sells copper.
Ore is gold or silver as an example, but lode is a vein of an ore that gives a lot of the ore.
That is the correct spelling of "vein" (blood vessel or metal ore).There are two homonyms (sound alike words):vain - immodest, conceited (or futile, as an effort)vane - a blade or stabilizer (e.g. weathervane)
lode
how do i get a metal ore
Any blood vessel, whether artery or vein, is vena in Latin.Vena will also do for a vein of ore.
Ore is not a form of metal, it is a form of stone, from which metal can be extracted.
That would be referred to as a vein, or if a valuable mineral, an ore vein.
Yes and No, while some metal ores may indeed be vein minerals, not all vein minerals are metal ores and not all metal ores are vein minerals.