An Overview Of The Geology And Production Of Wyoming Trona ? Introduction

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Ray E. Harris
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
12
File Size:
2589 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1984

Abstract

A resource of 134,400,000,000 tons of minable trona and mixed trona and halite underlies an area of about 1,300 square miles vest of Green River, Wyoming (Culbertson, in preparation)(Figure 1). In 1982, the total domestic consumption of soda ash (refined trona) was 6,667,000 short tons (Kostick, 1983), approximately 90 percent of which came from Wyoming trona. This enormous resource occurs in the Wilkins Peak Member of the Creen River Formation (Eocene). The Green River Formation is derived from sediments deposited in a large lake (Lake Gosiute) that occupied the Green River Basin in south-western Wyoming 38-54 million years ago. The Wilkins Peak Member represents a restricted, evaporite-rich cycle of deposition during which time the trona deposits were formed. A total of 42 trona beds are known, of which 25 are of sufficient thickness and extent to be considered minable (Culbertson, in preparation).
Citation

APA: Ray E. Harris  (1984)  An Overview Of The Geology And Production Of Wyoming Trona ? Introduction

MLA: Ray E. Harris An Overview Of The Geology And Production Of Wyoming Trona ? Introduction. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1984.

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