Limestone as a Raw Material

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
M. F. Goudge
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
6
File Size:
2400 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1939

Abstract

THE present century has witnessed an amazing transformation in the uses of limestone. From being mainly a structural material, a role it has played since the beginning of civilization, it has become one of the in-dispensable raw materials for use in the great chemical and metallurgical industries that play such a vital part in the economic life of the nations today. Its uses have become so diversified and numerous that it enters, directly or indirectly, into nearly every phase of modern life. In this introductory paper it is proposed merely to outline the general usefulness of limestone and to point out some of its salient features, and to leave any detailed discussion of uses to the papers that follow. The term limestone as herein used embraces all kinds from the variety known as high-calcium limestone, which is composed almost entirely of calcite, to the dolomitic variety, composed largely or entirely of the mineral dolomite. Lime is simply calcined limestone and, in considering the uses of limestone, the uses of lime should also be included, particularly in view of the fact that, in many processes, it is possible to use limestone in either the raw or the calcined state.
Citation

APA: M. F. Goudge  (1939)  Limestone as a Raw Material

MLA: M. F. Goudge Limestone as a Raw Material. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1939.

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