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Industrial Minerals - Resources and Utilization of North Carolina PyrophylliteBy Jasper L. Stuckey
PYROPHYLLITE, first identified as soapstone,' later as agalmatolite,2 and finally as pyrophyl-lite, has been known to occur in North Carolina for more than 130 years and has been produced intermi
Jan 1, 1959
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Industrial Minerals - Solution Extraction of Salt Using Wells Connected by Hydraulic FractureBy W. C. Peters, M. W. Pullen, C. A. Bays
During the past three and a half years considerable improvement in the techniques of solution extraction of salt has been made by the use of wells which are cross-connected by hydraulic fracture at th
Jan 1, 1961
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Industrial Minerals - Sulfur From Petroleum Gases and LiquidsBy A. E. Chute
The shortage of sulfur is not only continuing but appears to be worsening, attended by steadily rising prices. At the same time emphasis on air-pollution abatement is also increasing. These two fa
Jan 1, 1969
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Industrial Minerals - The Grand Isle Mine: Freeport Sulphur Company’s Offshore Venture (Mining Engineering, Jun 1960, pg 578)By C. O. Lee, Z. W. Bartlett, R. H. Feierabend
The Grand Isle sulfur mine is located in the Gulf of Mexico, approximately seven miles off the coast of Grand Isle, Jefferson Parish, La. The deposit is on acreage covered by oil, gas, and mineral lea
Jan 1, 1961
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Industrial Minerals 1986 - Barite, Bauxite and aluminaBy R. J. Anderson, A. V. Castelli
In 1986, United States' barite production fell 48.9%, consumption - sold or used by grinding plants - was off 47.3%, and imports were down 63.8%. Meanwhile, world mine production decreased 29.6%,
Jan 5, 1987
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Industrial Minerals 1986 - Diatomite - Dimension stone - DolomiteBy G. Coombs, L. Meade, J. Welshimer
Industrial Minerals commodity profiles are continued from May's Annual Review issue. Diatomite G. Coombs, Manville Sales Corp. Growth in US diatomite production continued to lag in 1986.
Jan 6, 1987
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Industrial Minerals 1987By L Baumgardner, A. V. Castelli
Barite In 1987, United States mine production of barite increased 15.870, consumption (sold or used by grinding plants) increased by 6.97, and imports are estimated to have fallen by 19.57. World
Jan 6, 1988
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Industrial Minerals 2001Editor’s note: As usual, the June issue features an industrial minerals review. And some thanks are in order. Thank you to the industrial minerals annual-review editor, to the technical committee
Jan 1, 2002
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Industrial Minerals 2002Editor’s note: As usual, the June issue features an industrial minerals review. And some thanks are in order. Thank you to the industrial minerals annual-review editor, to the technical committees
Jan 1, 2003
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Industrial Minerals 2004 - AttapulgiteBy C. Stoneback
The attapulgite industry saw a year of solid growth after a weaker 2003. Demand was up between 5 percent and 6 percent driven by almost all of the key markets. Construction continued to show reco
Jan 1, 2005
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Industrial Minerals 2004 - BariteBy P. Mills
The four top barite-producing countries in the world are China, India, Morocco and the United States. China is currently the largest exporter of barite followed by India. More than 95 percent of th
Jan 1, 2005
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Industrial Minerals 2004 - BentoniteBy C. R. Landis
The Wyoming bentonite industry continued its run of stable, if not strong, growth in its complex markets. Growth at the macroscale was fueled by a strong domestic economy, the weakening of the U.S. do
Jan 1, 2005
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Industrial Minerals 2004 - BoronBy S. Hamilton
Borates are essential to life, and to many products that are essential to an acceptable standard of living. They occur naturally in seawater at an average concentration of five milligrams of boron per
Jan 1, 2005
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Industrial Minerals 2004 - BromineBy R. Frim, S. D. Ukeles
The present U.S. production of bromine is from inland brines located in Arkansas and Michigan. The most concentrated domestic brines (up to 5,000 ppm bromide)are situated in Arkansas. Less concentra
Jan 1, 2005
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Industrial Minerals 2004 - CementBy J. MacFadyen
The U.S. cement industry experienced its best year ever during 2004 in terms of production and shipments of cement. Clinker, portland and masonry cements production and shipments were up considerably
Jan 1, 2005
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Industrial Minerals 2004 - DiatomiteBy A. Founie
The United States continues to be the world’s leading producer and consumer of diatomite. Production of diatomite in the United States during 2004 was estimated to be 635 kt (700,000 st). This was a
Jan 1, 2005
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Industrial Minerals 2004 - FluorsparFluorspar was not mined in the United States during 2004, although a small amount of usable synthetic fluorspar (CaF2) was produced from industrial waste streams. The majority of fluorspar consume
Jan 1, 2005
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Industrial Minerals 2004 - GemstonesBy D. W. Olson
The estimated value of natural gemstones produced from U.S. deposits during 2004 was $12.9 million. This was a 3-percent increase from that of 2003. U.S. gemstone production included agates, amber,
Jan 1, 2005
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Industrial Minerals 2004 - GraphiteBy H. A. Taylor
Graphite is elemental carbon that crystallizes in the hexagonal system as six-sided platelets. It occurs naturally and is mined. And it can be made artificially from petroleum coke in the form of sh
Jan 1, 2005
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Industrial Minerals 2004 - GypsumBy R. D. Sharpe
Gypsum wallboard manufacturers in the United States shipped 3.18 billion m2 (34.2 billion sq ft) of wall-board products during 2004 versus 2.93 billion m2 (31.5billion sq ft) in 2003. Following a hi
Jan 1, 2005