RI 3694 Some Refractory Properties of Washington Chromite

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Hewitt Wilson Kenneth G. Skinner Thomas L. Hurst
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
66
File Size:
6855 KB
Publication Date:
Mar 1, 1943

Abstract

Although chromite deposits occur in California , Oregon, Washington, Montana, Wyoming , Pennsylvania, Maryland , New Mexico , North Carolina, Alaska, and the Phillippine Islands , less than 1 percent of the ore used in the United States is obtained from these deposits . Most of the ore in peacetime has been supplied by imports from South Africa, New Caledonia, Turkey, and Cuba . The mineral chromite , the most important chromium ore , is an isometric spinel with an ideal composition of FeO Cr2O3 , but commercial chromite has the variable composition (Fe , Mg) Oʻ (Cr , Al , Fe) 203. Chromite has a black color , a specific gravity of 4.4 , and a hardness of 5.5 . In thin section the color is reddish -brown to black . Chromite occurs in dunite and pyroxenitic ultrabasic rocks , which are composed of iron- magnesium silicate minerals such as olivine , saxonite , serpentine , and enstatite . These are also the gangue minerals . Com mercial ore occurs at random in the country rock in kidney- or lens - shaped deposits , which have no apparent relationship to each other . Stringers , veins , and bands often cut the country rock without regard either to fracture or to other deposits . Some beach sands , such as those in southern Oregon, contain chromite .
Citation

APA: Hewitt Wilson Kenneth G. Skinner Thomas L. Hurst  (1943)  RI 3694 Some Refractory Properties of Washington Chromite

MLA: Hewitt Wilson Kenneth G. Skinner Thomas L. Hurst RI 3694 Some Refractory Properties of Washington Chromite. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1943.

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