RI 6271 Tallahatta Diatomite, Choctaw And Clarke Counties, Ala. ? Summary And Conclusion

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Earl L. Hastings
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
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16
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2906 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1963

Abstract

Although the principal market for diatomite in the United States is in the East,4 production of the material is presently restricted to the West, because the deposits are larger, mining costs are cheaper, and the quality of product is better than that obtained from other domestic deposits. However, Tallahatta diatomite, occurring in Choctaw and Clarke Counties, Ala., has a freight rate advantage, which should encourage competition for those market that are now being supplied with the purer diatomites from the western deposits. For this reason, diatomite occurrences in the Tallahatta formation were examined by the Bureau of Mines and physical properties of samples from the deposit were determined to obtain additional data for use by any potential producer who wished to evaluate the material for its commercial possibilities. In 1894 K. M. Cunningham5 found that the buhrstone formation (now known as the Tallahatta formation) contained "siliceous shells of marine diatoms, radiolaria and foraminifera, thus being rather of the nature of tripoli or diatomaceous earth than of a true clay." Cooke6 and Semmes7 also reported the Tallahatta formation to be composed principally of diatomaceous earth with accompanying beds of sand, clay, and sandstone.
Citation

APA: Earl L. Hastings  (1963)  RI 6271 Tallahatta Diatomite, Choctaw And Clarke Counties, Ala. ? Summary And Conclusion

MLA: Earl L. Hastings RI 6271 Tallahatta Diatomite, Choctaw And Clarke Counties, Ala. ? Summary And Conclusion. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1963.

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