Current issues with purported “asbestos” content of talc: Asbestos nomenclature and examples in metamorphic carbonate and ultramafic hosted talc ores - SME Transactions 2018

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 10
- File Size:
- 3663 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2018
Abstract
A Google search on talc asbestos yields more than 500,000 hits due to the growing number of civil
lawsuits in this area. Historically, the litigation was centered on amphibole-containing industrial talc.
There was no debate these talcs contained amphiboles, but the issue was the definition of asbestos
and whether the amphiboles had an asbestiform habit. Ultramafic-hosted talcs, however, are formed
in such a way as to not favor the formation of amphiboles in the talc, but they can occur in the
surrounding black-wall. In these deposits, the serpentinite host rock is in direct contact with the talc,
therefore, allegations can be made that non-asbestiform amphiboles or non-regulated serpentine group
minerals can occur in the final products. We analyzed talcs from both metamorphosed carbonate- and
ultramafic-hosted talc deposits using polarized light microscopy (PLM), scanning electron microscopy
(SEM) with energy-dispersive spectroscopy (EDS), electron microprobe (EPMA) with wavelengthdispersive
spectroscopy (WDS), transmission electron microscopy (TEM) with EDS, and powder
X-ray diffraction (XRD). Compositions of minerals determined by EDS alone are not sufficient to
confidently identify asbestos, despite common practices by some researchers. We emphasize, using both
historical samples, and analyses of currently contested minerals, the importance of determining both the
structure and composition of a mineral, as well as defining its morphology, before concluding whether
it is asbestos.
Citation
APA:
(2018) Current issues with purported “asbestos” content of talc: Asbestos nomenclature and examples in metamorphic carbonate and ultramafic hosted talc ores - SME Transactions 2018MLA: Current issues with purported “asbestos” content of talc: Asbestos nomenclature and examples in metamorphic carbonate and ultramafic hosted talc ores - SME Transactions 2018. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2018.