Ed Murphy North Dakota Geological Survey 600 East Boulevard Avenue Bismarck, N.D. 58505-0840 U.S.A. |
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There are three main type of salt
deposits within the Williston Basin of North Dakota: halite, potash, and
Glauber salt or mirabolite. Halite (sodium chloride or table salt) and
potash occur in thick deposits in the deep subsurface in the western part
of the basin. On the other hand, Glauber salt occurs at or within 70 feet
of the surface throughout North Dakota. |
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Caption * (Generalized
geologic column) Halite beds are found in the Prairie (Devonian), Charles
(Mississippian), Opeche (Permian), Spearfish (Permian-Triassic), and Piper
(Jurassic) formations. Potash beds are known to occur in the Prairie Formation
(Devonian). Sodium sulfate deposits are known to occur in Holocene lacustrine
sediments. |
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Halite |
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Halite occurs in
as many as 11 beds ranging in age from Devonian to Jurassic and occurring
at depths of 3,600 (McHenry County) to 12,600 feet (McKenzie County) in
North Dakota. In the past, salt was produced from solution mines at a
site near Williston and a site in Bowman County. |
Potash |
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Potash may be mined from North Dakota
in beds of sylvite (potassium chloride) or sylvinite (mixtures of potassium
chloride and sodium chloride). Approximately 50 billion tons of potash
occur in the Prairie Formation (Devonian) in North Dakota. These evaporites
were deposited in a trough that extends from the Northwest Territories
in Canada to northeastern Montana and northwestern North Dakota. Potash
beds occupy an area of 11,000 square miles that extends from the Montana
border to central Bottineau County and from the Canadian border to central
Dunn County. This salt interval reaches its maximum thickness of over
500 feet in Burke County. The potash portion of the salt section has a
gross thickness of 83 feet. |
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The main reason that North Dakota's
potash deposits have not been utilized is because these same beds are
found at a much shallower depths which enable the use of both conventional
mining as well as solution mining in southern Saskatchewan. There are
currently ten potash mines in Saskatchewan. Kalium operates a large potash
plant that processes brines from a series of solution wells near Belle
Plain, Saskatchewan. Potash is primarily used in the manufacture of fertilizer
although testing is currently being done to determine the feasibility
of a potash based water softening salt |
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Sodium Sulfate (Glauber Salt) |
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Many of the lakes in northwestern North Dakota contain brine, water with a high salt content, throughout much of the year. Sulfate concentrations exceed 100,000 milligram per liter (mg/l) in many of these lakes. The salt content of these lakes typically is lowest in the spring and increases throughout the year until it reaches a point in the late summer and fall when evaporation and cooling water temperatures cause Glauber salt to be precipitated. In fact, many of these are playa lakes; that is they routinely go completely dry in the late summer and fall. It is common for 2 to 8 inches of Glauber salt to form on these lake bottoms in the fall. Due to the high salinity of the water, most of these lakes contain little or no aquatic life, with the exception of brine shrimp Scientists believe that sodium sulfate crystals (in the form of mirabolite) began forming in some of the shallow lake bottoms in the northwest portion of the state shortly after the end of glaciation approximately 12,000 years ago. Many of the lakes in this area contain layers of sodium sulfate crystals that are from a few inches to over 20 feet thick. The thickness of lacustrine sediments beneath these lakes is quite variable from lake to lake and, at least in a few cases, quite variable within a given lake. Two lakes (Grenora #2 and Miller Lake) contain an average of 15 to 20 feet of lacustrine sediments (including mud and salt) and also have depressions which contain 50 to 70 feet of clay and salt. These depressions are thought to have been created when large iceblocks trapped in the glacial sediment slowing melted creating voids. As a result of the variability of thickness and of the thickness and extent of Glauber salt layers, numerous holes must be drilled at each lake in order to accurately determine the amount of salt in a given deposit. Information obtained by a 1934 Federal Emergency Relief Administration project, a 1952 U.S. Bureau of Mines study, a recent North Dakota Geological Survey project were used to determine that there is an estimated 46 million tons of Glauber salt beneath a fifteen lakes in northwestern North Dakota. Historically, the main use for Glauber salt has been in the production of Kraft paper. However, in recent years the detergent industry has become the main consumer of this salt in its used as a filler for powdered laundry detergent. A Canadian company recently began converting sodium sulfate to sodium bicarbonate by adding anhydrous ammonia and carbon dioxide to the salt. A byproduct of this procedure is ammonium sulfate, a marketable fertilizer. |
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Crystals of
mirabolite from salt crust at the base of North Lake, Divide County. Mirabolite
(NaSO4.10H2O) is the hydrated mineral
form of sodium sulfate. Mirabolite readily converts to a dehydrated mineral
form (thenardite) upon heating. The clear crystals throughout this sample
are mirabolite while the white crust on the left side of the sample are
thenardite. (Photo by E. Murphy, NDGS). |
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Typically, as
water levels decline in the late summer and fall a ring of salt (largely
thenardite) becomes visible along the shores of many of the lakes in the
northwest portion of the state. (Photo by E. Murphy, NDGS). |
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North Lake,
Divide County, in late summer. (Photo by E. Murphy, NDGS). |
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Stanley #2, Mountrail County
in late summer. (Photo by E. Murphy, NDGS). |
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Stink Lake.
Eventually, many of these lakes go completely dry in the fall. These playa
lakes generally contain a foot or two of water in the spring and experience
slowly declining water levels throughout the summer. (Photo by E. Murphy, NDGS). |
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Miller Lake,
Divide County. As temperatures drop in the fall, the cooling water can
no longer hold as high of concentrations of salt and mirabolite crystals
sink to the bottom of the lake. In recent years, Miller Lake has contained
from 4 to 8 inches of salt crystals i
06-Feb-2009
s back into solution when runoff enters the lake basin and
water temperatures rise. (Photo by E. Murphy, NDGS). |
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The waters of
Horseshoe Lake (Williams County) have been extremely green the last few
years due to high concentrations of algae. (Photo by E. Murphy, NDGS). |
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There are only
a few ways to obtain sediment samples from beneath these lakes: hand augering
in the late fall, drilling from a floating platform (barge) during the
summer, or drilling with a truck mounted rig in the winter when the lake
has sufficiently frozen. The North Dakota Geological Survey chose to drill
in the winter and had to contend with temperatures that ranged from 30
to -24 degrees Fahrenheit). (Photo by E. Murphy, NDGS). |
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Mirabolite
crystals obtained from a depth of 23 feet in Miller Lake, Divide County.
The amount of silt, clay, and organic debris in the salt layers was extremely
variable. Some portions of the salt layers were very clean while others
contained high amounts of detritus. (Photo by E. Murphy, NDGS). |
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Miller Lake
(Divide County) is underlain by 15 to 50 feet of lacustrine sediments.
These sediments include layers of Glauber salt, salt-bearing clay, and
silt. The thickest accumulation of lacustrine sediments occurs in the
northeast portion of the lake. High concentrations of gas were encountered
immediately beneath many of the layers of salt. |
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Gas bubbling
from a 25-foot hole at Miller Lake, Divide County. The gas is likely a
combination of methane and hydrogen sulfide. The methane is a result of
breakdown of the organic-rich muds and clays and the hydrogen sulfide
from anaerobic activity. Concentrations were sufficiently high to cause
several of the holes to be abandoned due to health concerns. (Photo by E. Murphy, NDGS). |
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A salt encrusted
Ross' goose at Stanley #2, Mountrail County. Quick drops in temperature
in the fall sometimes cause high amounts of mirabolite to form literally
overnight. As a result, waterfowl such as this goose can become encrusted
with salt, which can be fatal. Although this goose was nursed and fed
for a few days it was not able to recover and died. (Photo by E. Murphy, NDGS). |
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Selected
References for North Dakota Salt |
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Halite | |
Anderson, S.B., and Hansen, D.E., 1957, Halite deposits
in North Dakota: North Dakota Geological Survey Report of Investigation
No. 28, p. |
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Fischer, D.W., and Anderson, S.B., 1984, Little-known mid-Paleozoic
salts of northwestern North Dakota: North Dakota Geological Survey Report
of Investigation No. 83, 18 p. |
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Potash |
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Anderson, S.B., and Swinehart, R.P.,
1979, Potash salts in the Williston Basin, U.S.A.: North Dakota Geological
Survey Report of Investigation No. 68, 18 p.
Carlson, C.G., and Anderson, S.B., 1966, Potash in North Dakota: North Dakota Geological Survey Miscellaneous Series No. 26, 12 p. Glauber Salt Burr, A.C., McMillan, W.W., and Budge, C.E., 1951,
Sodium sulfate, North Dakota resources, nature-development-utilization:
North Dakota Research Foundation, 115 p. Witkind, I.J., 1952, The localization of sodium sulfate deposits in northeastern Montana and northwestern North Dakota: American Journal of Science, v. 250, p. 667-676. |