RI 5206 Manganese Resources Of The Batesville District. Ark.: Interim Report 1 ? Introduction And Summary

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
H. D. Kline
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
37
File Size:
12789 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1956

Abstract

Manganese ores have been mined in the Batesville district since 1849. Although not continuous over the intervening years, production had totaled approximately 432,000 tons of manganese ore and ferruginous manganese ore to the end of 1953. The ores occur in deposits, essentially low in manganese content, distributed over an east-west belt 24 miles long and 4 to 8 miles wide, the core of which is about 6 miles north of Batesville, Independence County. Although the reserves of high-grade ores in the district are comparatively small, the large deposits of subgrade ores and low-grade manganiferous material comprise potential sources of supply of manganese that may have increasing future importance. The manganese occurs as primary oxide and carbonate minerals in relatively flat-lying limestone and shale formations in which they were originally deposited and as oxides in residual clays resulting from decomposition of the shale and lime-stone. Most of the deposits underlie from a few to over a hundred feet of sedimentary chert, but many occur in the residual clays on exposed slopes of chert-covered hills.
Citation

APA: H. D. Kline  (1956)  RI 5206 Manganese Resources Of The Batesville District. Ark.: Interim Report 1 ? Introduction And Summary

MLA: H. D. Kline RI 5206 Manganese Resources Of The Batesville District. Ark.: Interim Report 1 ? Introduction And Summary. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1956.

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