IC 7405 Potash Mining in Germany, 1945

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 40
- File Size:
- 9739 KB
- Publication Date:
- May 1, 1947
Abstract
Potash is one of the essential chemicals used in fertilizing soil deficient
in natural minerals . Europe uses a large tonnage of potash in the
form of easily soluble salts , and this is particularly true of those countries
where the natural minerals in the soil have been exhausted owing to
intensive cropping of the land . The application of potash to the soil in
these countries is essential if normal crops are to be obtained ; during
the war , some European countries were unable to obtain sufficient potash ,
and productivity of the farming areas declined seriously .
•
The largest -known deposits of potash in the world ; with the possible.
exception of Russia , occur in Germany , and the German output of processed
salts constituted about 65 percent of world production prior to the war .
The German potash-plant installations are large , modern , brick and steel
construction and apparently built for a planned operation of many years .
Two districts produced approximately 80 percent of the German potash; the
Werra -Fulda district , near Vacha , had the largest production , and the Sudharz
district , near Nordhausen and Sonderhausen , was second . (Fig . 1. )
Hannover and Stassfurt were two smaller producers .
Potash fertilizers are rated in terms of potassium oxide (K20 ) . The
usual basis for calculation of production or application of the salt is
to reduce the potash content to 40 percent K₂0 .
Citation
APA:
(1947) IC 7405 Potash Mining in Germany, 1945MLA: IC 7405 Potash Mining in Germany, 1945. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1947.