Papers - Mining and Preparation of Florida Hard-rock Phosphate (T. P. 1315)
    
    - Organization:
 - The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
 - Pages:
 - 9
 - File Size:
 - 968 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jan 1, 1942
 
Abstract
The Florida hard-rock field extends from Suwanee and Columbia Counties in northwest Florida to south of Croom, Florida, in Hernando County. This area is approximately 100 miles long and varies from 2 to 30 miles in width.    Florida hard-rock phosphate was discovered at Hale Springs, about one mile northwest of the town of Dunnellon, Marion County, in the year 1888, by Alber-tus Voight, who lived within a few hundred yards of the spring. Soon after this discovery there was a great influx of land speculators and wildcat operators into the vicinity of Dunnellon.    A few years later phosphate was found in Alachua, Levy, Citrus and Hernando Counties, and a great number of small crude plants were built from Newberry, Alachua County, all the way to Croom, Hernando County. Phosphate was found in many places as "outcrops." Looking for outcrops was the first method used by the early prospectors in searching for deposits. Several years passed before any systematic method of prospecting was used.    Early Mining    The early method of mining hard-rock phosphate was with picks and shovels, wheelbarrows, mules and wagons. The pick-and-shovel method was used altogether until about 1900, when some of the    larger operators began to use railroad-type steam shovels of from ½ to I-yd. capacity Picks and shovels, with negro labor loading the phosphate ore (called "matrix") into wooden side-dump skip-cars, was continued until about 1907.    From the discovery of hard-rock phosphate   until   approximately   1905,   overburden   was   removed   with   mules   and scrapers. At some places, the overburden was loaded into side-dump skip-cars by negro  laborers  and the  cars were  then  pulled up an incline with a steam hoisting engine. The maximum depth of overburden  that could be economically removed by hand labor, mules and scrapers was approximately 15 feet. About 1905 one of the  companies erected a producer-gas power-   I house near Dunnellon and generated its own electricity and about the same time the larger companies began using hydraulic   methods for the removal of overburden.             From the year 1888 through the year   1939    approximately   75   companies   were operating at one time or another in the hard-rock territory, on approximately 500 locations. The hard-rock deposits are more irregular   and  have  higher   mining   costs than  the  pebble-rock  deposits,  therefore  1 they have  not  been  competitive  in  the  domestic market, but because of the higher  grade of the hard rock it is in demand for I the export trade. Discovery of phosphate outside of the United States has made it increasingly difficult in recent years for the hard-rock companies to survive, so today  i only three companies are operating. These
Citation
APA: (1942) Papers - Mining and Preparation of Florida Hard-rock Phosphate (T. P. 1315)
MLA: Papers - Mining and Preparation of Florida Hard-rock Phosphate (T. P. 1315). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1942.