Use Of Silica Sand In The Glass Industry In Missouri (18d1b075-b7bf-49bf-897f-de60182ff37a)

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 6
- File Size:
- 682 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1942
Abstract
THIS paper does not deal with all sands used in the glass industry in Missouri; it covers only that used in the plate-glass factory at Crystal City. However, it is probably safe to say that other sands, produced throughout the state for this purpose, are of identical nature. The glass sand used in Missouri is commonly called the St. Peter deposit, which is ascribed to the Ordovician Rock series in the form of sandstone. This St. Peter deposit, aside from a few small outliers, covers a large area of eastern Missouri. It forms, through a broad curve, the northeast margin of the typical Ozark region between Cape Girardeau on the southeast and Mineola, Montgomery County, on the northwest. The belt is extremely irregular, varying from one to ten miles in width; its length is 150 miles in a straight line. The outcrop near the entrance to the Crystal City mine appears in the form of a sandstone bluff approximately 30 ft. high, running along Plattin Creek (Fig. 1). Above the sand rock an overburden of Joachim limestone appears, which thickens to nearly 300 ft. and forms the hill commonly called Buck Knob. Test holes where drilled at various points and the drillers' log indicate that the St. Peter deposit ranges in thickness from 63 to 71 feet. PROPERTIES OF THE ST. PETER SAND From an analysis of the glass sands of the St. Peter formation in Missouri, the follow-
Citation
APA:
(1942) Use Of Silica Sand In The Glass Industry In Missouri (18d1b075-b7bf-49bf-897f-de60182ff37a)MLA: Use Of Silica Sand In The Glass Industry In Missouri (18d1b075-b7bf-49bf-897f-de60182ff37a). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1942.