The Significance Of The Mineral Industries In The Economy (8045fb5d-c927-41ce-b1d1-c2b2c5064a37)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Charles White Merrill
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
43
File Size:
2237 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1964

Abstract

Mankind's progress is measured in minerals. Man's emergence from prehistory is marked by passage through a Stone Age and a Bronze Age and into the present era, sometimes called the Iron Age or the Age of Metals. With the evolution of civilization and the development of a modem industrial economy, minerals become more and more important. Structures, roads, and machines are built largely of minerals; the energy to heat the structures and to drive the machines is mostly mineral; agricultural fertility is maintained by mineral fertilizers and water; and military strength is provided by fortresses, armaments, and munitions, largely of mineral origin. Thus in the material world, in the productivity of the economy, access to minerals has paramount importance. Every evidence indicates increasing dependence on minerals in the modem economy, particularly on the mineral fuels as energy sources to provide the power base for advancing industrialization. Both the total and the per capita consumption of almost every mineral is increasing in the industrialized nations. Moreover, nations with predominantly agrarian economies call themselves underdeveloped and universally strive to industrialize. Most mineral consumption trends in the more advanced economies have been greatly exceeding population growth-which itself has been advancing at an accelerating rate-and sometimes have surpassed the growth in real income. Some minerals have only recently been adopted or grown to importance in use. Titanium metal did not appear as a commercial product until 1948, and even coal seriously displaced wood as a source of heat less than two centuries ago. On the other hand, minerals have always played an important role in construction. The prehistoric megaliths that form the dolmens of Salisbury Plain are stone; the pyramids are andesite faced with limestone; and many other ancient structures are built of mineral materials. In modem times the whole course of architecture has been redirected by new building materials, mostly mineral. Most conspicuous is the sky-
Citation

APA: Charles White Merrill  (1964)  The Significance Of The Mineral Industries In The Economy (8045fb5d-c927-41ce-b1d1-c2b2c5064a37)

MLA: Charles White Merrill The Significance Of The Mineral Industries In The Economy (8045fb5d-c927-41ce-b1d1-c2b2c5064a37). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1964.

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