RI 4610 Investigation Of The Gideon Sillimanite Deposit, Spartanburg County, S. C.

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Harry G. Dosh
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
14
File Size:
5295 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1950

Abstract

Sillimanite, kyanite, and andalusite are aluminum silicates having the same chemical composition (Al2SiO5) and are used in the ceramics industry for the manufacture of high-grade refractories. Natural sillimanite with added corundum or other alumina to just short of mullite (3Al2O3 -2SiO2) proportions is unequalled for jobs wherein strength at high temperatures, resistance to spalling, and resistance to slagging by acid slags are desired. High-grade porcelain ware also requires these minerals. At the same cost, sillimanite would be preferred for most uses, but the lack of any large source of sillimanite bas given economic preference to kyanite or andalusite for special refractories and high-grade porcelain wares. Sillimanite-bearing schists were observed in Spartanburg County, S. C.; as early as 1937 by D. Hoye Eargle, geologist with the U. S. Soil Conservation Service. The mineral was not identified until 1942, when Miss Jewell Glass, of the U. S. Geological Survey, examined several of the deposits. This identification was confirmed in 1943 by Dr. Laurence L. Smith, of the University of South Carolina, when he examined the Spartanburg County deposits and found numerous additional occurrences of sillimanite schist in Greenville County. Subsequent work by the Bureau of Mines and the South Carolina Geological Survey has been responsible for the location of additional sillimanite-rich schist deposits in Spartanburg County. Between October 1, 1948, and November 21, 1948, the Bureau of Mines conducted an exploratory diamond-drilling project on the John Gideon property in the southeastern section of Spartanburg County (fig. 1) and drilled a total of 681.7 feet in six holes. Drilling indicated that the deposit is relatively shallow, as no ore was cut below the zone of weathering.
Citation

APA: Harry G. Dosh  (1950)  RI 4610 Investigation Of The Gideon Sillimanite Deposit, Spartanburg County, S. C.

MLA: Harry G. Dosh RI 4610 Investigation Of The Gideon Sillimanite Deposit, Spartanburg County, S. C.. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1950.

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