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INDUSTRIAL MINERALS AND METALS OF ILLINOIS
J. E. Lamar
STATE of ILLINOIS
ILLINOIS STATE GEOLOGICAL SURVEY John C. Frye, Chief URBANA, ILLINOIS
Printed by Authority of State of Illinois, Ch. 127, IRS, Par. 58.25.
J. E. Lamar
The mineral resources of Illinois include many rocks and minerals of varied character and uses. From them are made an array of everyday products whose sources may not even be recognized by the consumer. The user of a glass bottle, for instance, rarely knows that it may have been made from Illinois silica sand, nor is the driver of an automobile generally aware that the Illinois concrete highway on which he is driving probably was constructed from a mixture of cement, sand and gravel, or crushed stone that may have come from Illinois pits or quarries.
The significance of these rocks and minerals to the economy of Illinois is great, although often unappreciated. Of the more than 600 million dollar value of all Illinois mineral production in 1963, almost 200 million was from industrial minerals. The diversity and widespread distribution of these mineral resources lend variety and balance to the mineral industry of the state, and their production, processing, and utilization afford direct and indirect employment to many people.
The term industrial minerals is used as a convenient group term for nonmetallic minerals that are not fuels. In Illinois they include limestone, dolomite, clay, shale, silica sand and other sands, fluorspar, tripoli , ganister, novaculite, sandstone, feldspar-bearing sands, barite, gypsum, anhydrite, brines, greensand, oil shale, marl, peat, humus, and tufa. The metallic minerals of Illinois are galena , sphalerite , pyrite, and marcasite.
This booklet briefly and nontechnically discusses the foregoing materials and some of the work the Illinois State Geological Survey does in gathering information about their occurrence, and character and in developing new uses.
The assistance of many Survey staff members and of many people in the Illinois mineral industry in the preparation of this booklet is acknowledged.
LIMESTONE
Limestone is a most versatile rock. Without it there would be no portland cement for making concrete roads and buildings, no lime for plastering and chemical use, no agricultural limestone for farms, and no crushed limestone for driveways. A wide variety of industries, from steel making to glass manufacturing, use limestone in one way or another.
The early settlers of Illinois recognized the value of limestone and quarried stone blocks and slabs for making foundations, chimneys, and even houses. For mortar they used a mixture of sand and lime to hold the blocks together. The lime was made by heating limestone red hot in simple furnaces or kilns, the ruins of a few of which may still be seen.
Kinds of Limestone
Illinois has two principal varieties of limestone, referred to technically as limestone and dolomite. "Limestone" may be used as a general name for both varieties.
Limestone consists principally of crystalline particles of the mineral calcite . This mineral is glassy in appearance and is composed of calcium, carbon, and oxygen combined to form calcium carbonate--CaCO?. Dolomite is largely made of crystalline particles of the mineral dolomite, which also has a glassy appearance and consists of calcium, magnesium, carbon, and oxygen--CaMg?. The crystalline particles of limestone and dolomite vary in size. Some are coarse enough to be seen easily, others are so small that they can be distinguished only with a microscope.
Formation of Limestone and Dolomite
Almost all Illinois limestones were formed in seas that covered Illinois millions of years ago. The many different limestone formations in Illinois suggest that oceans covered all or part of the area several times. Numerous kinds of shell fish, corals, and other marine animals lived in these oceans and had shells and other hard parts made of calcium carbonate. Through countless generations, these animal remains accumulated on the ocean floor and gradually were compacted and cemented into limestone .
Other Illinois limestones, however, were formed by the hardening of muds composed mainly of calcium carbonate that accumulated on the floors of the ancient seas. Still other limestones were formed of a combination of animal remains and lime mud.
The coral reefs of the South Pacific Ocean have their counterparts in Illinois. The ancient Illinois oceans contained extensive reefs that were built up just as the modern reefs have been. In northern Illinois, around Chicago for instance, a number of the ancient reefs are now the site of stone quarries. In southwestern Illinois such reefs are a source of petroleum.
The dolomites of Illinois probably were originally limestones, but, either while the limestones were still beneath the sea or after the sea had withdrawn, magnesium was exchanged for some of the calcium in the limestones. If the exchange took place under the sea, the sea water was the source of the magnesium. If it happened when the limestones were a part of the land, the magnesium was brought in by water circulating through the rock. Many of the marine animal fossils became difficult to recognize after the change, and the texture and general appearance of the rock also were altered. Some of it became noticeably porous.
Uses of Limestone and Dolomite
Some of the major uses for Illinois limestone and dolomite are mentioned below. Not every limestone or dolomite can be used for all purposes because for each use the stone must fulfill special requirements of a chemical or physical nature. For example, it must have high purity for lime, resistance to wear and weather for roads and buildings, and a pleasing appearance for decorative stone and marble.
Besides being used in making mortar and plaster, lime is valuable in many other ways, especially in various chemical processes of modern industry. Plants at Chicago and Quincy make lime from Illinois limestone and dolomite.
Quarries
There are about 200 stone quarries in Illinois. Most of the larger quarries are in the Chicago, Joliet, Kankakee, and East St. Louis areas, but one or more limestone or dolomite quarry occurs in many counties.
If all the stone taken from Illinois quarries in 1963 were removed from a hole 100 feet square, the hole would penetrate into the earth about 8 miles. It would take more than 350,000 railroad cars holding 100 tons each to haul away the stone. Limestone, dolomite, and their products added over 80 million dollars to the economy of the state in 1963, approximately 8 dollars for each person in Illinois.
Most Illinois limestone and dolomite is quarried from open pits, but in some places, as in the rocky bluffs along the Mississippi River, the stone is taken from underground mines . There is also a dolomite mine in Chicago. At the quarries the first step is the removal of the earth overlying the stone. Next, in both pit and mine, the stone is blasted to free it from the parent deposit and break it into pieces. Mechanical shovels load the stone into trucks that take it to the crushing plant where powerful crushers further break the stone into pieces. The pieces are sorted into various sizes by large screens. At some of the plants, the stone is ground into powder.
Location of Limestone Deposits
The geologic map of Illinois prepared by the Illinois State Geological survey shows, with reasonable exactness, what bedrock formations would crop out at the surface if the overlying clay, sand, gravel, and earth were removed. Thick dolomite formations would be exposed in much of the northern fifth of the state, but would be rare elsewhere. Thick limestone formations would occur in an almost continuous zone, varying in width from 3 to 25 miles, along the Mississippi River from Rock Island to southern Illinois and then eastward across the extreme southern tip of the state. Limestone also would be seen along the Illinois River from Havana southward.
In the central area of the state, limestones are present, but they are rarely over 25 and often less than 15 feet thick. Consequently, most of the larger quarries are in the northern, western, and southern parts of Illinois. The thinner limestones, nonetheless, are of much importance and are quarried at many places, chiefly to provide agricultural limestone, road stone, and limestone for making cement.
The Geological Survey locates and maps limestone and dolomite deposits and analyzes and tests samples to determine the best possible uses for the stone. Many reports have been published about the character and general use of the deposits in various parts of the state. Other reports deal with the use of limestone and dolomite for specific purposes such as cement making, building and decorative stone, rock wool, terrazzo chips, and lime.
METALLIC ORES AND FLUORSPAR
Lead and Zinc
Lead mining was one of the earliest industries of Illinois. The early settlers' need for bullets for procuring food and for defense of their lives and property made lead an important commodity, and the deposits of lead ore in the northwestern corner of Illinois were quickly exploited. The ore was the mineral galena , for which the city of Galena in Jo Daviess County is believed to have been named.
Galena is a dark, shiny mineral that breaks readily into cubes or combinations of cubes. It is composed of lead and sulfur . Galena itself is not suitable for use as a metal; the lead must first be separated from the sulfur.
The earliest method of recovering lead from galena was crude. A pile of logs, smaller pieces of wood, and ore was built on sloping ground. Just below it a pit was dug. When the wood was set on fire, the heat caused the lead and sulfur to separate, and the molten lead trickled down into the pit. The smelting process was later improved, and stone "furnaces" were built to house the operations.
The residual deposits were found where the action of the weather for many thousands of years had dissolved the dolomite from the outcropping parts of a crevice deposit and left behind a residue of brown or red clay containing galena.
Some of the crevice and residual deposits worked by the early miners cropped out at the surface, but most of them were covered by earth. Other crevices were exposed in the bluffs of the Mississippi River and extended back into them for 1,000 feet or more.
SOIL A GALENA CLAY AND ROTTED DOLOMITE B GALENA CLAY AND ROTTED DOLOMITE DOLOMITE
When the richer deposits of ore in the crevices were worked out, some mines were deepened into the dolomite bedrock, but usually less rather than more galena was found.
As the amount of galena decreased, however, another mineral, which had been present before in only small amounts, was found in increasing quantities. This was sphalerite--a yellow, brown, or black mineral of resinous appearance that is composed of zinc and sulfur . It does not look like a metallic ore.
At first the sphalerite was not used because there were no smelters in the area that could separate the zinc from the sulfur with which it was combined in the ore. Between 1850 and 1870, however, smelters were built in northwestern Illinois and southern Wisconsin and the ore was shipped there. Sphalerite is now the principal ore mineral produced in northwestern Illinois.
The sphalerite and galena of southern Illinois, described later, are similar to that found in northwestern Illinois.
Blasting is required to loosen and break the ore. At the large mine the ore is brought to the surface by a hoist. In some relatively shallow mines an inclined tunnel has been driven to the ore body and the ore brought to the surface in trucks.
ORE PITCHES FLATS
Because the ore consists of galena and sphalerite attached to and scattered through dolomite, it must be milled to free and separate the metals from the rock. Crushing, grinding, and other operations are involved. The dolomite is discarded and the galena and sphalerite concentrates are shipped away to be smelted. No smelters have operated in the Galena area for some time.
It was noted early in the development of the northwestern Illinois mining district that zinc ore deposits were most common along small downfolds in the bedrock, called synclines, that were a few hundred feet wide and a mile or so long. The synclines were associated with much larger synclines that extended for several miles. A map prepared by the Illinois Geological Survey shows the possible location and extent of many of these downfolds and has had much practical use in the selection of the most promising areas for test drilling to find ore.
The Survey also collects the records of borings made by companies and individuals in their search for ore. The records are on permanent file at the Survey offices and are valuable in several ways. Some indicate where no ore was found and where it is, therefore, useless to drill further; others show only traces of ore but suggest that more drilling in the vicinity might discover a deposit large enough to be mined profitably. Still other records are of borings that encountered rich ore in which mines have been developed.
The third aid to prospecting is the study of ore bodies and their minerals to determine how the deposits were formed. The ore bodies have been and are being studied in the mines. Ore specimens are carefully examined in the Survey laboratories. If geologists can learn how the known deposits were formed, it may be possible to direct exploration into promising new areas.
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