Salt (41887f9c-5885-43a4-a0b1-a113b6085326)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Stanley J. LeFond Charles H. Jacoby
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
31
File Size:
1839 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1983

Abstract

Salt, or halite, has a long and most varied history. While we know the Chinese were producing salt as early as 3000 B.C., the first written reference to salt appears in the book of Job recorded about 2250 B.C., which reads: "Can nothing which is unsavory be eaten without salt?" We do not know when man first used or realized that he needed salt. Perhaps one of our early Eolithic ancestors noted a piece of salt shining along the shore of a salt lake or a bay. He may have been attracted by its shining luster and tasted it. He found that it had a tart, zesty, distinctive flavor and perhaps chewing a large piece, became ill. However, by experimentation he soon learned that taken in the proper proportions salt was a very pleasant additive to his food. He may have noticed, too, that it increased his feeling of well-being. Thus, when the curtain of recorded history rises, we find man using salt for his health's sake, seasoning his food with it, feeding it to his animals, and using it in many superstitious and religious ceremonies. These uses, however, are a far cry from the uses for salt today. The first attempts of white man to make salt in continental United States were reported in the year 1614, while the first commercial production was in 1753 from the Kanawha licks. Practically all this salt was for human consumption, preserving food, and curing hides. Prior to the coming of the white man, Indians are known to have made salt from salt springs such as those that existed at Avery Island, LA, Charleston, WV, Saltville, VA, and Onondaga, NY. In 1862 the first rock salt was mined in the US from the Avery Island salt dome. Almost immediately thereafter, rock salt was mined at Saltville, VA and then at Retsof, NY in 1885. Of the more than 39 million tons produced annually in the United States, about 58% or 23 million tons are consumed by the chemical industry in the production of chlorine, caustic soda, hydrochloric acid, sodium metal, and some 30 other basic chemicals. These basic chemicals, in turn, are used in the preparation of approximately 14,000 chemicals which range from soap and detergents, to such chlorinated hydrocarbons as DDT, BHC, carbon tetrachloride, etc. Utilization of cavities created in salt beds and domes has grown rapidly since 1947 until now the waste salt is creating an ecological problem. The uses for both dry- and solution-mined cavities range from the storage of liquid hydrocarbons to containerized storage of toxic wastes, from compressed air for the peak shaving of power to storage of nuclear wastes. Geology Mineralogy Properties: Because of its simple structure, halite, the mineralogical name for salt, was the first structure to be analyzed by X-rays. It has the following properties: Formula: NaCl (Na-39.34%. Cl2-60.66% ) Crystallography: isometric, hexoctahedral, 4/m 32/m Space group: Fm3m A0: 5.627 kX Cell contents: Na4CI4 Habit: usually cubic, rarely octahedral, massive, granular to compact Physical properties: Refractive index: 1.554 Twinning: observed on {111} Cleavage: {001} perfect Fracture: conchoidal, brittle
Citation

APA: Stanley J. LeFond Charles H. Jacoby  (1983)  Salt (41887f9c-5885-43a4-a0b1-a113b6085326)

MLA: Stanley J. LeFond Charles H. Jacoby Salt (41887f9c-5885-43a4-a0b1-a113b6085326). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1983.

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