Symposium On Prospecting For Phosphate

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 10
- File Size:
- 975 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1947
Abstract
[CONTENTS PAGE Foreword. By JAMES A. BARRI A New Core Barrel for Prospecting for Phosphate in Florida. By I. M. LEBARON 2 Prospecting for Phosphate in Tennessee. By W. F. GUENTHER 6 Machine Prospecting in Tennessee Brown Phosphate. By H. O. PICKARD, JR8 Diamond Drilling through Flint Horizons in Tennessee. By HENDON R. JOHNSTON9] Foreword PROSPECTING methods used in Tennessee have gradually improved with the years, as required by depletion of the easily accessible and shallow deposits and the universal trend toward mechanization, and as necessitated by exploring deeper beds, often occurring under limestone and flinty overburden. In the early days it was a very simple matter to dig pits by hand, using a plentiful supply of local farm labor to expose relatively shallow deposits of "brown rock" under shallow clayey overburden that would stand up without timbering. Visual inspection of the exposed phosphate and expert judgment of the"grade" analysis, aided by a "biting" test to reveal presence of unwanted silica, furnished most of the information required. All this might be helped by a few samples sent to the local chemist[t] who supplemented his income by judicious trading or tanning a few bear skins. The extra curricula activities did not affect the accuracy of the analysis which hold up even under present day standards. Some shot and core drilling was done in Hickman County, mostly for the limestone-like blue Phosphate deposits. The next step was the use of a 4-in. posthole auger, hand operated as described by Guenther, followed by- a completely mechanized rig, as described by Pickard. Both these methods are practically adapted to the prospecting of the relatively soft brown rock deposits at moderate depths of clay overburden. For prospecting in areas of deeper overburden, such as are often found in Hickman County, up to 150 or even 200-ft depths, a modified core-drilling method is described by Guenther. Johnston describes a special diamond-drilling technique, developed by TVA, to penetrate flint horizons, which was adopted by the International Minerals and Chemical Corporation to prospect in Hickman County where deposits had previously been prospected at considerable expense and with difficulty, by Small, temporary, hand-dug shafts.
Citation
APA:
(1947) Symposium On Prospecting For PhosphateMLA: Symposium On Prospecting For Phosphate. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1947.