Industrial Minerals Of Saskatchewan ? Introduction

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Lynn I. Kelley
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
4
File Size:
238 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1999

Abstract

Industrial-mineral production contributes on the order of CDN$1.5 billion per year to the economy of Saskatchewan, Canada. Potash is the primary industrial mineral produced in the province, followed by aggregate, sodium sulphate, salt, potassium sulphate, peat, clays, silica sand, calcium-chloride brine, and "clinker." Potentially economic deposits of kaolin, diamond, and building stone are under evaluation. All of the major deposits of commodities discussed here are located south of lat 56°30'N. Most of the locations are presented on Figure 1 POTASH Saskatchewan supplies approximately 30% of the world's demand for potash. Eight conventional underground mines and two solution mines produced an all-time high of more than 13 million metric tonnes of potash (KC1) (8 million tonnes K2O equivalent) in 1997, valued at over CDN$1.4 billion. All of the mines exploit the middle Devonian Prairie Evaporite. The four potash-bearing members of the Prairie Evaporite underlie much of southern Saskatchewan and extend southward into North Dakota and Montana and east- ward into Manitoba (Fig. 2). Halite and anhydrite separate the potassic members. The evaporite beds locally are interrupted by solution structures (anomalous ground). Some of the structures may be related to deep-seated tectonic features.
Citation

APA: Lynn I. Kelley  (1999)  Industrial Minerals Of Saskatchewan ? Introduction

MLA: Lynn I. Kelley Industrial Minerals Of Saskatchewan ? Introduction. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1999.

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