Tripoli Deposits Of Southwest Missouri And Northeast Oklahoma

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
W. F. Quirk
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
4
File Size:
178 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1978

Abstract

The Missouri-Oklahoma tripoli district was discovered and first mined in 1869 near Seneca, Missouri. Tripoli is a microcrystalline form of high-purity silica that is porous, light- weight, and friable and is derived from a parent siliceous sedimentary rock from which soluble minerals have been leached. Tripoli deposits, 2 to 20 feet thick, occur in cherty limestones of Mississippian age beneath 2 to 10 feet of overburden. They are mined in open pits up to 9 acres in size. The color of tripoli is white, but it also commonly is light pink or red where stained by red iron oxides and clays. Ground tripoli is used commercially as an abrasive or in buffing and polishing compounds and is prized for such physical characteristics as its abrasiveness, porosity, permeability, absorption, and specific gravity.
Citation

APA: W. F. Quirk  (1978)  Tripoli Deposits Of Southwest Missouri And Northeast Oklahoma

MLA: W. F. Quirk Tripoli Deposits Of Southwest Missouri And Northeast Oklahoma. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1978.

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