IC 7529 Phosphate-Rock Mining in Southeastern Idaho

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 30
- File Size:
- 2790 KB
- Publication Date:
- Oct 1, 1949
Abstract
This report is concerned with the conditions affecting the methods and
costs of mining phosphate rock in that part of the western phosphate field
that is in Bear Lake and Caribou Counties in southeastern Idaho ( see fig . 1) .
The area was selected because it contains most of the known phosphate reserve
and because its geology has been studied more extensively than that of other
sections .
Deposits of phosphate rock on public land may be leased from the Government
under the terms of the Mineral Leasing Act of 1920 , subject to the regulations
of the Bureau of Land Management . Public interest in phosphate production is
growing , as shown by an increasing number of applications for leases .
Two mines are being operated steadily for the production of phosphate rock
by companies that have also the necessary processing plants for the manufacture
of fertilizer . Total western phosphate - rock production in 1947 is reported by
the Economics Statistics and Division of the Federal Bureau of Mines to have
been 1,193,000 long tons , mined in Idaho , Montana , and Wyoming . The average
grade was 30.7 percent of contained phosphorus pentoxide (P205 ) ; the average
value at the mines was $5.67 per long ton . Idaho contributed 905,000 tons , or
somewhat more than 75 percent of western production . Western fertilizer plants
took 23 percent of total production; 76 percent was exported . Strip mining
accounted for 75 percent of the Idaho tonnage; the remainder was stoped from
underground workings .
Rock must contain a minimum of 30 percent P205 to be commercially useful
for the production of superphosphate fertilizer by current acid treatment
methods . Research by corporations and Government agencies has been directed
toward the use of lower - grade ore . So far , only by smelting can rock containing
as little as 25 percent P205 be used economically . Any development of processing
or use pattern that would render the mining of , say , 20 percent rock profitable
would have important effects in reducing the unit cost of mining .
In the search for metallurgical improvements , consideration should be
given to the saving of valuable components of the rock, such as vanadium and
fluorine , both of which are present in the beds .
Citation
APA:
(1949) IC 7529 Phosphate-Rock Mining in Southeastern IdahoMLA: IC 7529 Phosphate-Rock Mining in Southeastern Idaho. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1949.