Florida: The New Uranium Producer

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
John W. Sweeney
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
11
File Size:
667 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1979

Abstract

Florida is usually thought of as a vacation State, not a mining State, yet Florida has been the leading producer of phosphate rock in the United States for 85 consecutive years and in 1978 supplied over 80 percent of the national output and over 30 percent of the world's output. It is estimated that the Central and South Florida phosphates contain 412,800 short tons (374,000 metric tons) of U308, that 115,000 short tons (104,000 metric tons) of U308 will be contained in the wet-process phosphoric" acid procsssed in the United States through the year 2000, and that 54,000 short tons (49,000 metric tons) of U308 will be available from Florida. In 1978, two companies in Florida and one in Louisiana went on-stream recovering uranium oxide from wet-process phosphoric acid and three others started construction of U308 extraction facilities. These six companies will have the capacity to recover 2,137 short tons (1,900 metric tons) of U308 annually in 1980, which will account for about 15 percent of our domestic requirements.
Citation

APA: John W. Sweeney  (1979)  Florida: The New Uranium Producer

MLA: John W. Sweeney Florida: The New Uranium Producer. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1979.

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