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Stassfurt potash beds

Marr, U. (1959). Geochemical Studies of the Stassfurt Potash Beds. Freiberger Forsch. A123, 70-82. [Pg.438]

In the latter half of the nineteenth centuiy the United States was dependent on the vast Stassfurt deposits of Germany for the potassium compounds needed as fertilizers. In 1911 Congress appropriated funds for a search for domestic minerals, salts, brines, and seaweeds suitable for potash production (67). The complex brines of Searles Lake, California, a rich source of potassium chloride, have been worked up scientifically on the basis of phase-rule studies with outstanding success. Oil drillers exploring the Permian Basin for oil became aware of the possibility of discovering potash deposits through chemical analysis of the cores of saline strata. A rich bed of sylvinite, a natural mixture of sylvite (potassium chloride) and halite (sodium chloride), was found at Carlsbad, New Mexico. At the potash plane near Wendover, Utah, the raw material, a brine, is worked up by solar evaporation (67). [Pg.460]


See other pages where Stassfurt potash beds is mentioned: [Pg.134]    [Pg.135]    [Pg.73]    [Pg.430]    [Pg.524]    [Pg.430]    [Pg.524]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.428 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.428 ]




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