Heavy-Mineral Resources Offshore Of The Southeast Atlantic Coast

International Marine Minerals Society
Andrew E. Grosz
Organization:
International Marine Minerals Society
Pages:
4
File Size:
124 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1986

Abstract

The United States is dependent on foreign imports for about 80 percent of its ilmenite, about 60 percent of its rutile, and virtually all of its monazite. Nearshore marine sand deposits and beach-complex sediments in the southeastern United States are important domestic sources of ilmenite, leucoxene, rutile, zircon, monazite, and a number of other less well known economic heavy-mineral (HM) species. Because global onshore reserves of placer titanium minerals may fall short of demand in as few as 20 years, offshore research in HM placers will become more important. The Atlantic Continental Shelf (ACS) defined by the shoreline and the 200-m isobath varies in width for the modern U.S. coastline from a fraction of a kilometer to about 150 km offshore of Cape Cod, Mass., and includes an area of about 3.91 x 105 km2. It probably contains 3-7 x 1011 m3 of sand and gravel which may locally contain commercially exploitable placer HM deposits.
Citation

APA: Andrew E. Grosz  (1986)  Heavy-Mineral Resources Offshore Of The Southeast Atlantic Coast

MLA: Andrew E. Grosz Heavy-Mineral Resources Offshore Of The Southeast Atlantic Coast. International Marine Minerals Society, 1986.

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