Colemanite As An Important Source Of Borates

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
William T. Griswold
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
4
File Size:
1003 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1959

Abstract

Few metals or industrial minerals can boast a better growth record over the past fifteen years than the borates. This period of growth occurred before the influence of any large-scale use in plastics or high-energy fuels. These new developments not only provide expanding markets, but the programs related to their development are generating research information that will lead to many other new uses. The most dynamic growth areas for refined products of boron or borates are in the acid, the oxide and the reduced forms, such as the metal and the hydrides. Expanding requirements for these products will modify the emphasis on the use of naturally occurring sodium borates. Any borate from which boron can be economically extracted will become a potentially important ore. This is particularly true of the calcium borate, colemanite. Only one large deposit in the Western World has ever been developed where the principal economic minerals are sodium borates, This factor alone would discourage any exploration program directed solely toward the discovery of these ores; on the other hand, ample exploration opportunities for calcium borates exist in the desert regions of California and Nevada. It is therefore reasonable to restrict a program to this region, in spite of geologically favorable areas in foreign countries such as Turkey, Argentina and Chile.
Citation

APA: William T. Griswold  (1959)  Colemanite As An Important Source Of Borates

MLA: William T. Griswold Colemanite As An Important Source Of Borates. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1959.

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