Externet Posted September 9, 2005 Posted September 9, 2005 Which soils are abundant in somewhat pure form in nature ? Like lime, chalk, sand, what others ?
jdurg Posted September 10, 2005 Posted September 10, 2005 NaCl is out there in a VERY pure form in many caves, as are ammonium chloride and potassium nitrate.
H2SO4 Posted September 10, 2005 Posted September 10, 2005 Ya, probaly NaCl or KNO3. Id imagine there are some pretty pure deposits of calcium compounds in caves.
YT2095 Posted September 10, 2005 Posted September 10, 2005 according to one of my data books, the composition of the Earth is Oxygen 46.6%, Silicon 27.7%, Aluminium 8.1% and so on... for our sea water it`s : Oxygen 85.7%, Hdrogen 10.8%, Chlorine 1.90%, Sodium 1.10% and so on... so based on that, Sand (silicon dioxide) would seem to be the most abundant mineral, and oxides of aluminium and Iron before Sodium Chloride would be.
budullewraagh Posted September 10, 2005 Posted September 10, 2005 silicates of calcium, aluminum, magnesium and iron are very common carbonates of magnesium and calcium are also common, but often are in mixes (dolomite). ferric carbonate is common sulfates (hydrates and anhydrous) of calcium, barium and strontium are common chlorides of calcium, sodium and potassium and ammonium are common calcium fluoride a number of oxides can be found- ferric, ferrous, titanium (IV), etc FeS2, plumbous sulfide, etc calcium phosphate
Externet Posted September 11, 2005 Author Posted September 11, 2005 Thanks, gentlemen. From the responses above, the list of reasonably pure abundant natural soils could be: Lime Chalk Salt Coal Silica Water Silicates of calcium Silicates of aluminum Silicates of magnesium Silicates of iron Sulfates of calcium Sulfates of barium Sulfates of strontium Chlorides of calcium Chlorides of sodium Chlorides of potassium Chlorides of ammonium Calcium fluoride Nitrate of ammonium Nitrate of potassium Now, here is where you, skilled guys, come to play: Using any of the above, or more than one, plus heat plus any other requiered compound if needed, what mineral fuel can you come up with ? Example: Coal + lime + heat = calcium carbide -yields acetylene fuel- Let's get rid of petroleum, yes ? Miguel
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