The Mineral Industry Of Africa - Introduction (3fc4991a-a9c9-4dd8-b6c1-7890c2b88916)

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
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The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
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231
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122568 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1995

Abstract

The 53 countries that constituted Africa in 1993 accounted for a significant portion of total world output of a number of mineral commodities. For the continent as a whole, world shares of most commodities showed little change from those of 1992 although most output volumes showed a slight decline. There were no significant production increases, but there were significant decreases of cobalt and copper because of political instability in Zaire and production problems in Zambia, of chromite resulting from cutbacks in South Africa and Zimbabwe, and of phosphate rock owing to a lower output by producers in general. (See tables 1 and 2.) Among the most significant mineral commodities produced in Africa, ranked by portion of world production in 1993, were diamond, cobalt, chromite, gold, phosphate rock, manganese ore, uranium and petroleum. Others of importance in world trade were andalusite, antimony, asbestos, bauxite, coal, copper, fluorspar, lithium minerals, platinum-group metals (PGM), titanium minerals (ilmenite and rutile), vanadium, vermiculite, and zircon. Several of these-chromite cobalt, diamond, and manganese-were not produced in the United States.
Citation

APA:  (1995)  The Mineral Industry Of Africa - Introduction (3fc4991a-a9c9-4dd8-b6c1-7890c2b88916)

MLA: The Mineral Industry Of Africa - Introduction (3fc4991a-a9c9-4dd8-b6c1-7890c2b88916). The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1995.

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