Borax-Deposits of the United States

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Charles R. Keyes
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
37
File Size:
2573 KB
Publication Date:
Oct 1, 1909

Abstract

A COMPLETE transformation has taken place in the boras industry during the year 1908. A most remarkable factor in this radical change in method of producing the crude borates has been its removal from the realm of industrial chemistry to the field of mining. With the development of extensive deposits of borate-minerals interstratified in thick sequences of Tertiary clays and sands, their winning becomes a strictly mining-enterprise, of the same kind and of the same certainty as the digging of coal or iron-ore. The major supply of the world's production of commercial borax now comes from the United States. While formerly all of the boric salts of commerce were laboriously extracted from the waters of saline lakes of the arid regions, or from the bottom-salts of desiccated ponds, it later was largely slowly leached from ancient desert shales and clays. During these periods the borax industry was a very hazardous and expensive vocation.
Citation

APA: Charles R. Keyes  (1909)  Borax-Deposits of the United States

MLA: Charles R. Keyes Borax-Deposits of the United States. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1909.

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