RI 5157 Cowlitz Clay Deposits Near Castle Rock, Wash. ? Introduction And Summary

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
C. C. Popoff
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
64
File Size:
24547 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1955

Abstract

The growth of the aluminum-smelting industry in the Pacific Northwest, resulting from national defense requirements, emphasized a need for local sources of alumina to supplement the alumina production shipped from the East. Because supplies of foreign bauxite were being interrupted and our domestic bauxite reserves were inadequate, it was necessary to expedite the investigation of other possible sources of alumina during World War II. A program of investigation of high-alumina clay deposits in the Northwest was carried out jointly by the Federal Geological Survey and the Federal Bureau of Mines. As part of this program the Cowlitz clay deposits near Castle Rock, Wash., were explored by the Bureau of Mines in 1942-43. These deposits are near railroads, tide-water, and Bonneville Power Administration lines and within 22 to 100 miles of 4 aluminum-reduction plants.
Citation

APA: C. C. Popoff  (1955)  RI 5157 Cowlitz Clay Deposits Near Castle Rock, Wash. ? Introduction And Summary

MLA: C. C. Popoff RI 5157 Cowlitz Clay Deposits Near Castle Rock, Wash. ? Introduction And Summary. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1955.

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