Recent Developments; U.S. Atlantic Shelf Marine Mineral Surveys

- Organization:
- International Marine Minerals Society
- Pages:
- 4
- File Size:
- 315 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1988
Abstract
The Atlantic Continental Shelf (ACS) of the United States includes about 391,000 km2 extending from the shoreline to the 200-m isobath. It varies in width from a fraction of a kilometer (offshore of southern Florida) to about 150 km (offshore of Cape Cod, MA). The contained volume, of sand and gravel is estimated to be on the order of 3-7 x 1.011 m3. Concentrations of potentially commercially important heavy minerals (HM) exist locally, particularly in high-energy depositional environments (for example in channels, tidal deltas, ridge and swale areas, and submerged former shoreline complexes). Recently completed and ongoing studies of HM assemblages in vibracore samples from the south shore of Long Island Sound, NY, offshore of Ocean City, NJ, offshore of Cape May, NJ, offshore of the mouth of Chesapeake Bay, VA, offshore of Myrtle Beach, SC (grab samples), and the ACS offshore of Florida provide the information base for this presentation (Table 1). The surficial sediments of the ACS contain local concentrations of HM that compare favorably to those in currently mined onshore deposits as shown
Citation
APA:
(1988) Recent Developments; U.S. Atlantic Shelf Marine Mineral SurveysMLA: Recent Developments; U.S. Atlantic Shelf Marine Mineral Surveys. International Marine Minerals Society, 1988.