Celestine (Celestite) In Southwest Arkansas

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
William D. Hanson
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
6
File Size:
401 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1999

Abstract

Celestine (celestite) (SrSO4), the primary ore mineral of strontium, is present in the DeQueen Limestone Member of the Trinity Group (Lower Cretaceous) in Sevier, Howard, and Pike Counties, southwest Arkansas. Two mappable celestine beds have been identified. One bed is commonly 3-5 in. thick, but ranges up to 18 in. in thickness; the other bed is generally 2-3 in. thick. The beds are concordant within the DeQueen Limestone and were formed by precipitation from periodically restricted sea water. Reports concerning celestine date back to 1929, when Hugh D. Miser and A. H. Purdue mapped the geology of the DeQueen and Caddo Gap quadrangles. A small amount of celestine was produced in the early 1940s in Howard County. During 1941, the J. W. Hintze Company collected 1,500 pounds of celestine for testing purposes. In 1942 and 1943,750 test holes were drilled by the Bennett-Clark Company in Howard County. Afterward, approximately 90 tons of celestine was open-pit mined and shipped to Texas for processing. Since then, no mining of celestine in Arkansas has taken place.
Citation

APA: William D. Hanson  (1999)  Celestine (Celestite) In Southwest Arkansas

MLA: William D. Hanson Celestine (Celestite) In Southwest Arkansas. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1999.

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