Bulletin 178-B War Minerals Nitrogen Fixation and Sodium Cyanide

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 24
- File Size:
- 7790 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1919
Abstract
The term war minerals has been applied t.o those ores and minerals
that were largely imported. before the war. Among the mon
important of these are manganese, essential for making high-grade
steel for munitions and industrial use; graphite, for u,.akin1 crucibles;
tin, for plating utAmsils and for bearing-met.al; mereury, used
as fulminate t.o explode shells; pot.uh, for making fertilizer and explosives;
tungsten and molybdenum, for high-speed t.ool steel; antimony,
for hardening bul!et lead; chromite, for tool steel, for tan- ,
ning leather, and as a refractory lining in furnaces; magnesite, for
:refract:A>ry linings; mica, as insulating material; platinum, for the
manufacture of sulphuric acid and for electrical apparatus.
When the United States entered the war it was clear that every
ship would be needed and that the number available for importing
minerals would be small. Hence a quick and thorough survey of
domestic resources was necessary. .
Throughout the war the scope and volume of the war-minerals
work increased until it covered practically every mineral that was
known t.o be or was liable to be in short supply.
Citation
APA:
(1919) Bulletin 178-B War Minerals Nitrogen Fixation and Sodium CyanideMLA: Bulletin 178-B War Minerals Nitrogen Fixation and Sodium Cyanide. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1919.