Manganese Ore (8b80a85d-3ee0-4816-b463-b6b1cbc15799)

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 9
- File Size:
- 341 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1949
Abstract
MANGANESE ore is a true jack-of-all trades among industrial minerals, its only possible rival being iron ore. It is used in porcelain enamel, dry batteries, building brick, glazed pottery, floor tile, plastics, welding rods, chemicals, and varnish. You may be reading this through spectacles decolorized with manganese, and the light bulb above you contains some of this element. GEOLOGY Nearly all commercial manganese oxide deposits are of secondary origin; that is, they are concentrated by weathering from other manganese minerals more sparsely distributed in veins. The oxide minerals usually form irregular masses but in some places (Russia) they occur as beds of varying thickness and purity. Some manganese oxide bodies occur in soft gravel or clay formations but in other places the minerals are found in the form of veins and rounded nodules in limestone and other hard rocks. The geologic features of manganese deposits closely resemble those of iron deposits. Classification of the deposits is shown in the following table: I. Classification of manganese deposits based upon form of occurrence A. Stratiform masses 1. Oxides interlayered with sediments or layered volcanic or metamorphic rocks 2. Carbonates or silicates interlayered with sediments or layered volcanic or metamorphic rocks 3. Oxides, as surface bog deposits B. Veins and breccia filling 1. Oxides in larger part 2. Carbonates or silicates partly weathered to oxides C. Irregular masses 1. Oxides 2. Carbonates or silicates largely weathered to oxides D. Aggregates of small oxides in clay or weathered rocks 1. Mainly oxides E. Unclassified deposits II Classification of manganese deposits based upon mode of origin A. Hydrothermal deposits
Citation
APA:
(1949) Manganese Ore (8b80a85d-3ee0-4816-b463-b6b1cbc15799)MLA: Manganese Ore (8b80a85d-3ee0-4816-b463-b6b1cbc15799). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1949.