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Origin and distribution of evaporite borates; the primary economic sources of boron
Cahit Helvaci and Martin R. Palmer
Origin and distribution of evaporite borates; the primary economic sources of boron (in Boron; light and lively, Edward S. Grew (editor))
Elements (August 2017) 13 (4): 249-254
Origin and distribution of evaporite borates; the primary economic sources of boron (in Boron; light and lively, Edward S. Grew (editor))
Elements (August 2017) 13 (4): 249-254
Index Terms/Descriptors
- Anatolia
- Argentina
- Asia
- basins
- borate deposits
- borates
- borax
- boron
- Cenozoic
- chemically precipitated rocks
- Chile
- China
- colemanite
- evaporites
- extension
- extension tectonics
- Far East
- industrial minerals
- Middle East
- mining
- Neogene
- Peru
- playas
- reserves
- sedimentary rocks
- South America
- tectonics
- terrestrial environment
- Tertiary
- Turkey
- ulexite
- United States
- volcanism
Latitude & Longitude
Abstract
Naturally occurring borates are the major economic source of boron. Borates were first used over 4,000 years ago in precious-metal working and are now essential components of modern industry. Although borates have been exploited from other sources, three minerals from non-marine evaporites now form the major commercial sources of borate - borax, colemanite and ulexite. These major commercial deposits are associated with Neogene volcanism in tectonically active extensional regions at plate boundaries. The most important continental borate provinces are located in the USA, Argentina, Chile, Peru, and China, with the largest borate reserves in the world being found in western Anatolia (Turkey).
ISSN: 1811-5209
Serial Title: Elements
Serial Volume: 13
Serial Issue: 4
Title: Origin and distribution of evaporite borates; the primary economic sources of boron
Title: Boron; light and lively
Affiliation: Dokuz Eylul Universitesi, Jeoloji Muhendisligi Bolumu,
Izmir,
Turkey
Affiliation: University of Maine, School of Earth and Climate Sciences,
Orono, ME,
United States
Pages: 249-254
Published: 201708
Text Language: English
Publisher: Mineralogical Society of America and Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland and Mineralogical Association of Canada and Geochemical Society and Clay Minerals Society,
International
References: 29
Accession Number: 2017-076731
Categories: Economic geology, geology of nonmetal deposits
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Illustration Description: illus. incl. 2 tables, geol. sketch maps
N36°04'60" - N42°01'60", E26°10'00" - E44°49'60"
S55°00'00" - S22°00'00", W73°00'00" - W53°30'00"
S56°00'00" - S17°45'00", W76°00'00" - W67°00'00"
N20°00'00" - N53°00'00", E74°00'00" - E135°00'00"
S18°15'00" - N00°00'00", W81°10'00" - W69°00'00"
Secondary Affiliation: University of Southampton,
GBR,
United Kingdom
Country of Publication: International
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2017, American Geosciences Institute. Abstract, copyright, Mineralogical Society of America. Reference includes data from GeoScienceWorld, Alexandria, VA, United States
Update Code: 201740