Geology In Potash Mining And Exploration ? Introduction

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Samuel S. Adams
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
29
File Size:
1118 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1970

Abstract

Economic concentrations of potassium are essentially limited to thick, stratigraphic sections of marine evaporites. These deposits were precipitated through the evaporation of sea water in restricted epicontinental seas or in grabens related to continental margin rift systems. Following deposition the deposits were subjected to diagenesis and varying degrees of metasomatism and structural deformation. The origin and characteristics of potash deposits are easier to study and interpret than those of most ore deposits because the phase chemistry of the salt systems is known and the approximate composition of the ore-forming fluid (sea water) can be inferred with confidence. It is particularly helpful that the temperature and pressure of deposition approximated that of present earth surface conditions and the pertinent mineral assemblages can readily be duplicated in the laboratory. The study of these comparatively simple salt deposits provides examples of the practical advantages of understanding the genesis of an ore deposit. These observations, in turn, illustrate the importance of pursuing research on the more complicated magmatic, hydrothermal, and ground-water systems as a means to the more successful exploration for and exploitation of the deposits they have produced. It is the purpose of this paper, therefore, to discuss certain aspects of salt deposit geology as they contribute to exploration and mining through some understanding of ore formation. References to field examples and chemical relations in the salt systems are brief. All examples are more fully discussed, however, in the references cited.
Citation

APA: Samuel S. Adams  (1970)  Geology In Potash Mining And Exploration ? Introduction

MLA: Samuel S. Adams Geology In Potash Mining And Exploration ? Introduction. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1970.

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