Showing posts with label mining. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mining. Show all posts

22 Apr 2022

Tasty Rocks: salt and friends

Salt — that stuff that melts the ice on sidewalks and makes popcorn taste so yummy — salt is a rock! Well, the kind in your salt shaker is rock-y. There's also salt dissolved in the oceans. It is dissolved rock! A mineral, actually. 

Salt is mined just like rocks too! It takes huge mining equipment like front loader shown in the photo of a salt mine below. 

Is salt the only rock that is tasty?

Big machinery cuts salt out of Iran's gigantic salt mine on the Silk Road in Semnan province.

Well, many rocks do have a taste. OG geologists used to use their taste buds to help identify rocks. Like, for instance, they could ID a rock because it tasted more bitter than its lookalike. Like halite does vs natural sodium chloride (table salt). Of course, tasting rocks is a bit of a gross way to identify them. It's not always safe, either! Some very hard substances can hurt you.

Lead is a harmful but useful rock-like substance. It was used in things like weights, pencils, and even paints. It tastes a little sweet. In fact, one of the old names for lead is "sugar of lead"! Problem is, lead causes brain damage that makes it harder to think. It is not safe to lick lead!

Lead isn't used in paints or pencils anymore. It hurt too many people and animals. Lead isn't used in fishing weights either, now. When people have to work with lead to build things today, they wear a lot of safety equipment to make sure that no lead gets on their skin or in their lungs. (See the lead safety instructions.)

Besides salt, gypsum is a rock we eat. You might know it as drywall, the sheets that make the walls in your house and school. That white crumbly gypsum is used in making beer, flour, ice cream and cheese! It tastes like — well‚ it tastes like drywall!

Here are some other rocky substances that have their very own flavour:

Borax — sweet but works as a cleaner, it is not a food

Chalcanthite — sweet but poisonous

Epsomite — bitter

Glauberite — salty and bitter

Hanksite — salty

Melanterite — sweet, puckery and metallic

Sylvite — bitter

Ulexite — alkaline (more soapy)


17 Jan 2014

Stories in Slate: Touring an Underground Mine

Corris Mine Explorers tour, Wales
By Marie Powell (Photos by L. L. Melton)

A tour of an underground mine offered a hands-on science opportunity during a recent trip to the Braich Goch slate mine in North Wales.

We spent more than two hours in the mine tunnels with our expert guide Mark of Corris Mine Explorers. During that time, we explored the abandoned caverns, learned a little mining history, and examined original artifacts used in this once-prosperous slate mine.
Tallow candles in clay (L L Melton photo)

The underground tunnels date to 1836, and by 1878 the mine employed about 250 workers producing 7000 tons of slab and roofing slate. In its heyday, families negotiated for mining rights to the chambers, which were known as "bargains," Mark told us. Men and boys aged 10-35 worked the mine in near darkness, hoarding the tallow candles made from sheep fat that provided their only light source. They used clay to carry the candle with them and fix it to the slate walls of the mine as they worked


Tools (L L Melton photo)

We had a chance to see several original artifacts used in the mine and left there. These tools date back to the 1860s, Mark said. Using the mallet, a worker would strike the rod three times, then turn and strike three more, for a total of nine strikes. Black powder was packed into the hole. They used copper and brass rods because they don't spark, he added.
Mine shaft (L L Melton photo)

Since the mine is full of ledges and drops, and candles were scarce, it was important to have a reliable method of finding their way around the mine in almost total darkness, he said. They used a form of echo-location, orienting themselves to the sounds of dripping water in the cave, or to their own singing.

Tight fit


Most of the time we were able to walk upright, but at times there was barely enough room for a person to crouch. At one point Mark tied us to a rope and let us look out over a drop in the mine to a level below. Staring down at the eerily echoing caverns far below us, we were glad of our headlamps and gear, and hyper-aware of the danger the miners faced every day.
Mine artifacts (L L Melton photo)
Artifacts lined the mine at strategic locations. Mark pointed out the expected ones, such as a detonation box, explosives, and a "bugle" of black powder. Among the artifacts we saw a 19th Century example of recycling: a jar for W P Hartley's marmalade, probably re-used for drippings from sheep fat, since bread and drippings were a staple of the miner's diet.

These historical artifacts also show the effects of rust, which occurs when water and oxygen goes to work on iron, especially cast iron as would have been the case in the late 1800s.


Stratification (L L Melton)
The walls themselves are a study in stratification, or the layers of rock that form over time. We stopped more than once to examine them.

Stratification (L L Melton photo)Mushrooms were visible in several places as well, and Mark pointed out that these fungi can act as agents of erosion on some artifacts, such as this oxidizing nail covered in what looked like red-orange fuzz.

Ochre coloration (L L Melton)The ochre coloration, generally from iron oxides or limonite, gave the walls of the mine a striking look in places as well.

The geological processes we could clearly see at work in this underground environment made it well worth the trip, and having a knowledgeable guide willing to let us explore at our own pace was invaluable.

Marie Powell is the author of seven books for children, including Dragonflies are Amazing (Scholastic Canada) and a six-book Word Families series (Amicus Publishing). 


http://sci-why.blogspot.ca/2014/01/stories-in-slate-touring-underground.html