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additional physical form Issued also on microfilm by University of Florida, George A. Smathers Libraries.
statement of responsibility State of Florida, Department of Natural Resources, Bureau of Geology.
dates or sequential designation No. 59-
numbering peculiarities Some no. not published in chronological sequence. No. 60 published by the issuing body under an earlier name: Division of Geology.
issuing body Prepared by the U.S. Geological Survey in cooperation with the Bureau and other state, local, and federal agencies.
Also filmed with this title is the Florida Geological Survey. Leaflet, no.1-16.
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mods:title Information circular Division of Geology
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20695836
Information circular (Florida Geological Survey : 1985)
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SUBJ650_2
Hydrology
Florida
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Mines and mineral resources
Florida
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PAGE 1
The Mineral Industry of Florida This chapter has been prepared under a Memorandum of Understanding between the Bureau of Mines, U.S. Department of the Interior, and the Florida Bureau of Geology for collecting information on all nonfuel minerals. By James R. Boyle1 and Charles W. Hendry, Jr.2 The value of nonfuel mineral production fuller's earth, and peat. Staurolite and zirin 1980 in Florida was $1.5 billion, an con concentrates were produced only in increase of $239.2 million over that of 1979. Florida. Principal nonmetals, in order of Florida ranked first nationally in total valvalue, were phosphate rock, stone, cement, ue of nonmetallic minerals produced, and sand and gravel, and clays. nonmetals accounted for over 95% of the Although mineral output in 1980 increasState's total nonfuel mineral production ed compared with the 1970 level, and in value. The State ranked first in the producsome cases doubled in the 10-year period, tion of phosphate rock and titanium concentotal value during this period increased trates, and was second in crushed stone, nearly 500%. Table 1.-Nonfuel mineral production in Florida' 1979 .1980 Mineral Value Value Quantity (thousands) Quantity (thousands) Cement: Masonry _-----------------_ thousand short tons-_ 255 $13,098 285 $22,074 Portland ---------------------------do__ _ 2,957 126,562 3,574 182,590 Clays ---------------------------------do -681 231,308 614 224,164 Gem stones -----------------------_ NA 4 NA 5 Lime ----------------------_ thousand short tons-210 11,440 195 12,434 Peat -___ _ _ do.. 153 2,190 154 2,398 Sand and gravel ----------------------do --21,708 39,520 314,464 328,831 Stone (crushed) __-----------------do_ -.r63,787 r188,896 66,209 • 215,972 Combined value of clays (kaolin), magnesium compounds, phosphate rock, rare-earth concentrate, industrial sand (1980), staurolite, titanium concentrate (ilmenite and rutile), zircon concentrate _ _____---------------------_ __ _ _ -_ _XX r856,589 XX 1,020,286 Total -------------------------------XX rl,269,607 XX 1,508,754 rRevised. NA Not available. XX Not applicable. 'Production as measured by mine shipments, sales, or marketable production (including consumption by producers). 2Excludes value of kaolin; value included in "Combined value" figure. 'Excludes industrial sand; value included in "Combined value" figure. 1 ^'4
PAGE 2
-MINERALS YEARBOOK, 1980 Table 2.-Value of nonfuel mineral production in Florida, by county' (Thousands) Cun 1978 1979 Minerals produced in 1979 County 1978 1979 _ in order of value A-achua-------------$3,074 $2,789 Stone. 3av--------------663 1,040 Sand and gravel. Br-vard ---------W W Clays, stone, sand and gravel. Broward ------------12,408 20,607 Stone, sand and gravel. Calhoun ----------75 52 Sand and gravel. Charoe ------------W Ctrs ---------------2,445 6,002 Stone, phosphate rock. Clay ----------23,838 26,526 Titanium, zirconium, staurolite, sand and gravel, monazite, clays. Collier --------------3,521 6,236 Stone. Dade ---------------W W Stone, cement, sand and gravel. Dixie ------W Escamnia ------------680 605 Sand and gravel. Gadsden --------------W W Clays, sand and gravel. Glades --------------W W Sand and gravel. Gulf ---------------W W Magnesium, lime. Hamilton W W Phosphate rock. Hardee -------------W W Do. Hendrv W W Stone, sand and gravel. Hernando ------------W W Stone, cement, lime, clays. Highiands -W W Peat. Hillsborough --W W Phosphate rock, cement, stone, peat. Jackson ---------1,594 620 Stone, sand and gravel. Lake W W Sand and gravel, peat. Lee -----------------8,036 W Stone. Leon -------------W W Sand and gravel. Lev ----------------449 2,846 Stone. Manatee -------------W W Cement, stone. Maron --------------10,189 12,772 Stone, clays, sand and gravel, phosphate rock. Monroe -------------W 2,447 Stone. Nassau -----------W W Titanium, zirconium, monazite. Ckaloosa ----------33 36 Sand and gravel. Orange -------------64 64 Do. ?sim Beach ------------90 W Stone. sc_ ----W W Do. DPik ---------------640,981 676,298 Phosphate rock, sand and gravel, peat. umam--W W Sand and gravel, clays, peat. St. Lce 30------------307 W Sand and gravel. Sana RomW -----------W arnsota -------------W W Sand and gravel, stone. .uminer ---------W W Lime, stone. Suwannee _ -----------W W Stone. Tavior --------------W 2,787 Do. Walton -------------W W Sand and gravel. Undistrbuted2 ----------390,321 507,884 Tatal3------------1,098,772 1,269,607 W Withheld to avoid disclosing company proprietary data; included with "Undistributed." :The following counties are not listed because no nonfuel mineral production was reported: Baker, Bradford, Columbia, De Soato Duval, Flagler, Franklin, Gilchrist, Holmes, Indian River, Jefferson, Lafayette, Liberty, Madison, Martin, Okeechobee. Osceola, Pinellas. St. Johns, Seminole, Union, Volusia, Wakulla, and Washington. `Includes gem stones and values indicated by symbol W. )Data may not add to totals shown because of independent rounding. Of the 54.4 million metric tons of phosPhosphate Council reported that member phate rock produced in the United States, companies plan to spend about $2 billion in Florida was the predominant producer, and the next 5 years in expansion programs. Of for the S7th consecutive year supplied more the $2 billion, an estimated 18% will be for than any other State. Florida and North environmental controls. Companies plan to Carolina supplied nearly 87% of the domesdevelop six new mines, one chemical fertiltic phosphate rock output; Florida supplied izer complex, and expand two mines and mcst of the exports. eight chemical fertilizer plants. These operThe nationwide recession did not affect ations will be in Hamilton County in north the nonmetallic minerals industry in FloriFlorida, and in De Soto, Hardee, Hillsboda as seriously as other Southeastern rough, Manatee, and Polk Counties in the States. Although the housing market was southern part of the State. The council stable, commercial and other nonresidential estimates construction and operating jobs building increased. Road maintenance work will number about 11,600 as companies decreased because of reduced Federal input. build and expand plants and mines to keep Trends and Developments.-The Florida pace with increasing world demand for
PAGE 3
THE MINERAL INDUSTRY OF FLORIDA 8 fertilizer. Delays involving permits governduce 5 million pounds of extruded shapes ing land use and airand water-quality and tubes annually when it reaches full standards may extend the time period for production in mid-1981. startup of operations. Companies report The Port of Tampa, which handled over that it can take 5 years and cost more than 51 million tons of cargo, shipped the major $6 million to obtain necessary permits to portion of exported phosphate. Phosphate open a new mine. exports totalled nearly 16 million tons, Norsk Hydro Aluminum Inc. began prowhich included nearly 12 million tons of duction of cold-drawn aluminum tubing at bulk phosphate. Phosphate accounted for Rockledge, approximately 60 miles southabout 90% of all export cargo through the east of Orlando. This is the first manufacPort of Tampa. About 1.2 million tons of turing plant owned entirely by Norway's aragonite was imported from the Bahamas Norsk Hydro to be located outside Europe. for use in the manufacture of cement. The $6.5 million plant is expected to proTable 3.-Indicators of Florida business activity 1979 1980p Changen Employment and labor force, annual average: Total civilian labor force ----------------------------thousands-3,835.0 3,925.0 +2.4 Unemployment _ ----------------------------do-.... 230.0 234.0 +1.7 Employment (nonagricultural): Min _---ing --......------do---.... 10.1 10.6 +5.0 Manufacturing-----------------------------------do .... 443.6 457.2 +3.1 Contract construction ------------------------------do -..... 241.4 267.0 +10.6 Transportation and public utilities ----------------------do -....-208.5 219.3 +5.2 Wholesale and retail trade --------------------------do---....889.5 931.7 +4.7 Finance, insurance, real estate ---------------------do --235.0 252.6 +7.5 Services --------------------------------------do --752.6 815.8 +8.4 Government --------------------------------------do.... 600.5 616.3 +2.6 Total nonagricultural employment1 -------------------do --3,381.2 3,570.5 +5.6 Personal income: Total -------------------------------------millions.$75,631 $86,944 +15.0 Percapita ----------------------------------------------$8,521 $8,987 +5.5 Construction activity: Number of private and public residential units authorized ---------------175,705 178,092 +1.4 Value of nonresidential construction -----------millions-$1,684.8 $2,132.5 +26.6 Value of State road contract awards ------------------------do----..... $383.6 $316.0 -17.6 Shipments of portland and masonry cement to and within the State thousand short tons-4,998 5,820 +16.4 Nonfuel mineral production value: Total crude mineral value ---------------------------millions-$1,269.6 $1,508.8 +18.8 Value per capita, resident population_$143 $155 +8.4 Value per square mile --------------------------------$21,680 $25,764 +18.8 'Preliminary. 1Includes oil and gas extraction. Sources: U.S. Department of Commerce, U.S. Department of Labor, Highway and Heavy Construction Magazine, and U.S. Bureau of Mines. Legislation and Government Proterm effect on the ground water despite two grams.-The Federal Bureau of Mines and episodes of roof collapse during the mining. Agrico Chemical Co. conducted borehole As a followup to the borehole mining mining research tests to recover deep phostests, Agrico announced plans for a pilot phate ore in St. Johns County. The mining borehole phosphate mining and processing site used by Agrico and the Bureau for the program in St. Johns County. The first 9 borehole mining in the summer of 1980 has months of 1981 will be used to obtain been completely restored. All borehole minoperating permits, construct and install ing cavities were backfilled using a Bureaumining and processing equipment, and field developed technique to replace 1,800 tons of test the components. Mining and processing ore that was shipped to the Agrico Mill at will start in the first quarter of 1982 and Mulberry, Fla., and the original topography will continue for most of 1982. The mining was restored. The U.S. Geological Survey, rate planned is 30 tons per hour on a onewhich monitored the impact on ground shift basis, and processing the matrix will water hydrology of the borehole mining be at a rate of 15 tons per hour on a twooperations, issued a draft report stating shift basis. that the mining had no significant, long-
PAGE 4
.4 MINERALS YEARBOOK, 1980 3,000 C0 r 2.000 < -J -i 0 -1.000 1977 1980 1985 Figure 1.-Total value of nonfuel mineral production in Florida. The Bureau approved a report, "Economquality waters for processing. ic Impact of the Phosphate Rock Industry Research programs included beneficn Selected Florida Counties, Florida, and ciation of dolomitic phosphate ores, benefithe United States," for open file status. The ciation of phosphate-bearing Hawthorn Forreport was prepared by the Florida Remation limestone, recovery of phosphate sources and Environmental Analysis Center from beneficiation slimes, and direct aciduunder Bureau contract. lation of phosphate, matrix to improve reThe Bureau awarded a contract to covery of POs. Zellars-Williams, Inc., Lakeland, to obtain, In a U.S. Environmental Protection estimate, and accumulate engineering and Agency (EPA) mine waste study, EPA seprofile data from foreign phosphate mines lected 20 copper, phosphate, uranium, gold and deposits. and silver, lead and zinc, and molybdenum The Florida Bureau of Geology had two mine sites in 10 States for intense study. contracts with the Bureau, one to inventory The analysis is designed to determine which and classify reclaimed lands in the phosmine wastes, if any, warrant specially taiphate area, and the other to monitor phoslored regulations in the future under EPA's phate activities in Florida using digital hazardous waste law, Part C of the Resource analyses of Landsat imagery. Conservation & Recovery Act (RCRA). Mine Since 1972, the Bureau, at its Tuscaloosa and processing wastes are currently exempt Research Center, has been involved in a from RCRA until results are presented to concerted research effort to develop methCongress and the law is amended. Sites ods that will either eliminate the retention being considered in Florida for study inareas of phosphate waste slimes or provide clude two phosphate mine waste rock an improved waste storage system. dumps and two tailings ponds. EPA will Inhouse Bureau project activity during analyze solid waste, ground water, surface 1980 included research on water recovery water, and emissions at each site. Monitorfrom phosphatic clay slimes, continuous ing will be completed by August 1982, with flocculation dewatering and floc formation a report to Congress in October 1982. studies, and reuse and purification of lowBrownwell Engineering, Inc., was award-
PAGE 5
THE MINERAL INDUSTRY OF FLORIDA 5 ed a contract by the U.S. Geological Survey other geologic and stratigraphic studies for exploratory drilling to determine the were continued. In addition to basic geologic nature of the phosphatic sediments, clay, studies, the Bureau of Geology handled and peat of the Holocene, Bone. Valley, and reclamation and maintained a geologic well Hawthorn Formations in the Roadless Area log library and a computerized list of minerReview and Evaluation (RARE) II and wilal producers and statistics. derness areas of the Ocala, Osceola, and Twelve publications were issued during Apalachicola National Forests. the year, including "Limestone, Dolomite, The Geological Survey released Circular and Coquina Resources of Florida," and 824, "Thorium -Resources of Selected Re"Sand and Gravel Resources of Florida." gions in the United States." The report The staff supported a major revision of covers thorium reserves and resources in Chapter 16C-16, Florida Administrative beach placers in northern Florida. These Code, Mine Reclamation Rules. Florida's deposits are principally mined for titanium, Governor and Cabinet approved these reclawith thorium and other minerals recovered mation rules, which would require restoraas byproducts. tion of a mining site to as near as possible The Florida Department of Environmenits original state. The rules include (1) tal Regulations completed the publication, restoration of environmentally sensitive ar"Water Quality and Mining." Included in eas, (2) elimination of certain tax rebates, the report are the major regulations af(3). approval of premining reclamation fecting mining and its environmental efplans, (4) stricter standards for creation of fects, and the report recommends the best lakes, (5) retroactive compliance of future ,management practices. Federal standards for radiation emissions, During the year, the Florida Bureau of and (6) requirements for slime storage beGeology completed eight studies on environlow natural grade to the greatest extent mental geology, stratigraphy, ground water, possible. Effective date of the rules was ana clay resources in the State. Twelve October 1, 1980. REVIEW BY NONFUEL MINERAL COMMODITIES NONMETALS plants. Of the 11,10 were wet process, and 1 ment.-Shipments of both portland was dry process. About 440 million kilowattCement.-Shipments of both portland hours of electrical energy, in addition to and masonry cement increased in 1980. natural gas, fuel oil, and coal, were conProduction of masonry cement in Florida sumed in the manufacture of cement. ranked third nationally, while portland Moore McCormack Resources, Inc., new ranked fifth. Five companies produced portowners of Florida Mining & Materials land cement at six plants; masonrywas Corp., announced a $68 million expansion produced at four plants. Most of the shipprogram for cement and concrete producments of both portland aind masonry cetion at the company's Brooksville plant. ment were to users within the State. The plan calls for adding a second coal-fired Portland cement shipments, mainly in kiln and increasing grinding and storage bulk form, were made by truck and rail. capabilities. The plant is expected to be Principal consumers were ready-mix dealoperational by the third quarter of 1982, ers, building material dealers, and concrete and will double the production capacity of products manufacturers, with the remainthe plant to 1.2 million tons of cement per ing to other contractors and Government year. The company also plans to purchase agencies. additional trucks to increase deliveries of Most raw materials used to manufacture ready-mix and concrete block. cement were mined within the State, and Clays.-Clays mined in Florida included included limestone, clay, sand, and staurocommon clay, .fuller's earth, and kaolin. lite. With higher value uses developing for Total clay production and value decreased. staurolite, a substitute may be necessary in Common clay output and value increased. the near future. Oolitic aragonite imported Common clay was produced by four compafrom the Bahamas was used along with nies at four pits in Clay, Gadsden, Hernansmall amounts of gypsum, clinker, fly ash, do, and Lake Counties in the northern part clay, iron ore, and slag; most were obtained of the State. The clays were used in" the from out-of-State sources. manufacture of cement and lightweight agEleven rotary kilns were operated at five gregate.
PAGE 6
6 MINERALS YEARBOOK, 1980 Florida continued to rank second in the Peat-Florida ranked second nationally Nation in fuller's earth production, alin peat production in 1980. Production and though production decreased. Fuller's earth value increased slightly. Ten plants: prowas mined by four producers from nine pits duced moss, reed-sedge, and humus peat in Brevard, Gadsden, and Marion Counties. from five counties. Most of the peat, shipped Main end uses were for fertilizer fillers, pet in bulk, was used for general soil improvewaste absorbents, pesticides, and drilling ment and for potting soils. mud. Perlite.-Four companies produced Kaolin was produced by one company at expanded perlite from crude ore shipped two pits in Putnam County; production into the State. Production increased to remained at about the same level as in 1979. 31,700 tons; value increased to $3.7 million. The deposit also includes silica, with the Perlite was expanded at plants in Broward, sand recovered for glass and other industriDuval, Escambia, and Indian River Counal uses. Principal uses for kaolin were in ties, and was used for horticultural purelectrical porcelain, whiteware, and wall poses, insulation, and fillers. tile. Major kaolin markets were in the Phosphate Rock.-Florida ranked first in Southeast, although some was exported. the Nation in the production of phosphate Fluorine.-Fluorine, in the form of fluorock. Marketable production of phosphate silicic acid, was recovered at six plants as a rock in 1980 increased 6% in quantity and byproduct of wet-process phosphoric acid 20% in value. manufacture. Fluosilicic acid was used to The phosphate industry continued to be produce cryolite, aluminum fluoride, sodithe principal mineral industry in the State. um silica fluoride, and was also used in Nearly all phosphate companies announced water fluoridation. The value of fluorine development or expansion plans. Developbyproducts is not included in the State's ment costs of mines have increased from mineral value. $34 per ton of annual capacity in 1975 to Gypsum.-Imported gypsum was calcined approximately $100 per ton in 1980; conat two plants in Duval County and one struction costs of phosphoric acid plants plant in 1Hillsborough County. United have increased from $141 per ton of annual States Gypsum Co., Jim Walter Corp., and capacity in 1975 to $440 per ton in 1980. In National Gypsum Co. calcined gypsum in 1980, companies spent $436 million for exkettles, a rotary kiln, and a holoflite unit, pansion, replacement, and new construcrespectively. Production in 1980 decreased tion. Expansion plans announced in 1980 to 637,000 tons, a drop of 22,000 tons from will be equivalent to an additional $2 billion the 1979 leveL investment by 1985 if permits are obtained. United States Gypsum announced plans In line with local government concerns, the to expand its north Jacksonville plant, with Governor and Cabinet approved revised reccompletion scheduled for late 1981. The $25 lamation rules for phosphate producers that million expansion will increase capacity to would require restoration of a mining site 600 million board feet per year, reportedly as near as possible to its original state. making it the largest in the world. The Soft-rock phosphate was produced by four market area is south Georgia and Florida. companies in 1980, operating five mines in Lime.-Quicklime was produced by Basic Citrus and Marion Counties. The soft-rock Magnesia, Inc., Gulf County, Chemical phosphate was used for direct application to Lime, Inc., Hernando County; and Dixie the soil and, if low in fluorine, as an animal Lime & Stone Co., Sumter County. Hydratfeed supplement. ed lime was produced by Chemical Lime, Land-pebble phosphate was produced at Inc. Production decreased 7%, but value 22 mines by 13 companies in Hamilton, increased 9%. Lime was used for magnesia, Hardee, Hillsborough, and Polk Counties. water treatment, and sewage-disposal In 1980, agricultural uses accounted for systems. 71%; industrial, 1%; and exports, 28%. Magnesia.-Florida ranked second naNormal superphosphate, triple superphostionally in the recovery of magnesium comphate, wet-process phosphoric acid, and depounds from seawater. Basic Magnesia, Inc., fluorinated phosphate rock were produced Port St. Joe, Gulf County, produced caustic for agricultural uses: Industrial chemicals calcined magnesia and refractory-grade were produced from the production of elemagnesia from seawater;, plant capacity is mental phosphorus. 100,000 tons of MgO equivalent. Shipments Agrico Chemical Co., with a reported in 1980 decreased 9%; value increased 3%. annual mining capacity of 7.5 million tons,
PAGE 7
THE MINERALINDUSTRY OF FLORIDA 7 began an expansion program at its South plant to wet grinding, increase production Pierce phosphoric acid facility. The addition capacity by 20%, and reduce emissions. The to the phosphoric acid. plant will reportcompany purchased mineral rights to more edly increase capacity by 120,000 tons per than 7,000 acres in Hardee County for over year by 1981.; .$10 million. AMAX, Inc.,:purchased the mining operW. R. Grace & Co. announced plans to ations and phosphate reserves of Borden, spend $300 million from 1980 to 1984 for Inc., for $200 million, and will spend $44 environmental controls; the 1980 budget million more Jto expand and improve the was $52.7 million, compared with $38.9 operation. In addition to Borden's Big Four million in 1979. W. R. Grace & Co. and Mine, AMAX acquired a phosphoric acid International Minerals & Chemical Corp. complex at Piney Point and a defluorinated (IMC) continued development of their Four feed phosphate facility at Plant City. The Corners Mine in Hardee, Hillsborough, Big Four Mine in Hillsborough County will Manatee, and Polk Counties. The $500 milexpand capacity from 1.6 to 2.5 million tons lion venture will have a design capacity of 5 per year. In addition to purchasing addimillion tons per year. Grace, which is plantional reserves, a dragline and processing ning to expand its Hooker Praire Mine, is equipment were acquired. AMAX continued participating in a joint venture with U.S.S. development of its proposed $335 million, 4 Agri-Chemicals, Inc. The companies plan a million-ton-per-year mine in Manatee and $200 million fertilizer plant at Fort Meade De Soto Counties. A contract was awarded to include two sulfuric acid facilities. for the engineering, design, and construcIMC announced a planned $400 million tion of the facility. AMAX plans to spend a expansion of its Florida phosphate operprojected $625 million in the 1980's to develations. In addition to its venture with op their phosphate operations. -Grace, IMC plans to spend $58 million to Beker Industries Corp. started developing expand its New Wales plant, increasing its $100 million phosphate mine in eastern overall output by 500,000 tons per year. IMC Manatee County. Present plans call for a 1purchased additional reserves, including a million-ton-per-year operation. A produc$4 million purchase of land from Bartow tion level of 3 million tons per year, is Minerals near IMC's Clear Springs operscheduled by late 1982. Beker plans to build ation. IMC also purchased a $13.5 million a $5 million facility at Port Manatee to ship dragline capable of removing overburden in rock to its fertilizer plant in Louisiana. excess of 40 feet thick. Estech, Inc., continued in its attempts to Mississippi Chemical Corp. filed a proposdevelop its 3-million-ton-per-year Duette al to develop a 3-million-ton-per-year mine Mine in Manatee County. Early in the year, and beneficiation plant in Hardee County. the Manatee County Zoning Board denied Reserves are reportedly sufficient for over Estech a permit to mine, but this was 30 years. A decision on when the mine revised by the Governor and Cabinet. Howwill be developed has not been made by ever, the Florida Department of EnvironMississippi Chemical Co. mental Regulation then denied Estech a Mobil Oil Corp. received permits from the permit for waste water discharge. The perSouth Florida Water Management District mit is required in order to construct slime to develop a new mine in the Fort Meade ponds. Mining plans are thus delayed inarea. The 3-million-ton-per-year mine, to be definitely. in operation by 1984, will replace Mobil's Farmland Industries, Inc., planned to deFort Meade Mine scheduled to close in 1988. velop a $200 million mine and chemical Mobil has been purchasing land.east and plant near Ora in Hardee County. However, southeast of the proposed site. the Hardee County Commission rejected Occidental Petroleum Corp. (Oxy) continFarmland's request to build the chemical ued construction of a $3.2 million animal plant, but gave approval to the 2-millionfeed supplement plant at White Springs. ton-per-year mine. Farmland did not apAlthough an embargo was placed on phospeal, but was considering either increasing phate fertilizer shipments to the Soviet production at its Green Bay plant or purUnion, Oxy's major customer, the company chasing an existing plant. was able to develop other markets to susGardinier, Inc., received permission to tain its operations. Oxy and South Africa's expand its fertilizer plant adjoining HillsTriomf Fertilizer agreed in principle to a borough Bay and the Alafia River. The $67 marketing program whereby Oxy would million expansion program will convert the have an alternative source of phosphoric
PAGE 8
8 MINERALS YEARBOOK, 1980 acid to fulfill its contracts with the Soviet primarily by truck, with the balance Union, while Triomf would utilize Oxy as a shipped by railroad and waterway. Sand source of phosphate rock. Oxy also was and gravel was used mainly for construcnegotiating with mainland China to contion purposes, which included concrete agstruct production plants in China and regregate and fill, with the balance going into ceive phosphoric acid in return, industrial uses. Four companies produced Bartow Minerals and T. A. Minerals over 1 million tons each; the top 14 compaCorp. closed their phosphate rock mining nies, with 25 pits, mined 90% of the total operations in Polk County in 1980. sand and gravel in the State. Florida Rock Zellars-Williams, Inc., Lakeland, was Industries, Inc., opened an industrial sand awarded a $36,000 contract by the South operation at Interlachen in Putnam CounFlorida Water Management District to proty. The sand will be used by southeastern ject the water needs and possible water glass manufacturers and foundries. Glass sources for the phosphate industry over the sand is shipped to Anchor Hocking Corp. in next 20 years. The area to be studied inJacksonville, with foundry sands shipped to cludes land in the Alafia, Manasota, and the the Alabama markets. The company also Peace River Basins. obtained permits for a $2 million sand plant Sand and Gravel.-Total sand and gravel in Marion County. Construction started at output decreased in 1980. Lake, Polk, and the end of the year with financing through Glades were the leading producing counties. Industrial Development Revenue Bonds. During 1980, 34 companies operated 46 The plant will serve the Daytona Beach mines in 19 counties. Transportation was market. Table 4.-Florida: Construction sand and gravel sold or used, by major use category 1979 1980 Use Quantity Value Value Quantity Value Value (thousand (thouper (thousand (thouper short tons) sands) ton short tons) sands) ton Concrete aggregate 11,949 $19,200 $1.61 7,927 $16,713 $2.11 Plaster and gunite sands-------------------239 584 2.44 W W 2.99 Concrete products 869 1,765 2.03 2,424 4,998 2.06 Asphaltic concrete -----------------------868 2,195 2.53 619 1,855 3.00 Roadbase and coverings --------------------2,214 2,845 1.28 680 1,907 2.80 Fill-------------------------------4,503 4,556 1.01 2,432 2,310 .95 Other ------------------.. ...-------------383 1,049 2.74 Total' or average ---------------------20,642 31,145 1.51 14,464 28,831 1.99 W Withheld to avoid disclosing company proprietary data; included in "Other." 'Data may not add to totals shown because of independent rounding. Table 5.-Florida: Sand and gravel sold or used by producers, by use 1979 1980 Use y Value Value 1antity Value Value uani
PAGE 9
THE MINERAL INDUSTRY OF FLORIDA 9 Staurolite.-Florida is the only State nando, which supplied 65% of the State's with a recorded production of staurolite. total production. Sixteen companies proStaurolite was recovered as a byproduct of duced over 1 million tons each from 36 ilmenite production at the Highland and quarries, and accounted for 67% of the Trail Ridge plants of E. I. du Pont de production and 71% of the value. Nemours & Co., Clay County, and by AssoCrushed stone was transported mainly by ciated Minerals Ltd., Inc. (United States), truck and railroad, and was used for densealso in Clay County. Production decreased graded roadbase, concrete and bituminous in 1980. Staurolite was mainly used in aggregate, and cement manufacture. Two sandblasting, with minor amounts used in companies processed oyster shell for roadcement and as a foundry sand. bed material. Stone.-Florida ranked second in the NaSulfur.-Florida ranked fifth in the Nation in crushed stone production, which tion in the production of recovered elemenincluded limestone, marl, and oyster shell. tal sulfur. Recovered sulfur from Exxon's Stone was produced by 89 companies at desulfurization plants in Escambia and 128 quarries in 24 counties. The three leadSanta Rosa Counties decreased in 1980. ing counties were Broward, Dade, and HerTable 6.-Florida: Crushed stone sold or used by producers, by use (Thousand short tons and thousand dollars) 19791 19802 Use -Quantity Value Quantity Value Agricultural limestone -------------------------1,131 6,036 1,729 8,299 Agricultural marl and other soil conditioners -----------52 452 115 632 Poultry grit and mineral food ----------------------490 2,837 497 3,064 Concrete aggregate ------------------------------14,085 53,980 14,583 57,691 Bituminous aggregate -------.----------------3,498 12,490 4,604 17,010 Dense-graded roadbase stone -----_----------------17,603 37,602 16,497 40,325 Surface treatment aggregate ---------------2,885 12,804 3,708 14,716 Other construction aggregate and roadstone ------------_13,409 30,858 12,164 32,946 Riprap and jetty stone ___ --------------------------__ 58 277 59 398 Filter stone--------------------------------55 233 W W Manufactured fine aggregate (stone sand) -------------5,642 19,770 5,813 23,134 Cement manufacture ----------------------2,344 5,139 2,337 5,615 Lime manufacture -------------------367 1,007 449 1,120 Asphalt filler -------------------------------21 209 20 221 Other fillers ------------------------188 1,222 184 1,288 FilL ------------------------------------1,580 2,919 2,288 5,068 Glass manufacture----------------W W 20 191 Other3 -------------------------------------200 632 1,140 4,257 Total4 -------------------------------63,609 188,467 66,209 215,972 W Withheld to avoid disclosing company proprietary data; included with "Other." 'Crushed limestone only. 2Includes limestone, shell, and marl. 'Includes stone used for macadam aggregate, railroad ballast, and filter stone (1979). 4Data may not add to totals shown because of independent rounding. Vermiculite.-Exfoliated vermiculite was Springs for $11.7 million. The properties produced by two operators at four plants in were mined thereafter by Associated MinerBroward, Duval, and Hillsborough Counties als Ltd., Inc., a subsidiary of the Australian from crude ore shipped into the State. firm AMC. AMC plans to invest an additionProduction increased 11% over that of 1979; al $6 million for working capital and imprincipal uses were for lightweight aggreprovements to bring the operation up to gate, horticulture, and insulation, optimum capacity. Reserves at Green Cove Springs are projected to last 16 years at an METALS average annual production rate of 25,000 Mineral Sands.-Du Pont and Associated tons of rutile, 25,000 tons of zircon, and Minerals produced concentrates from their 50,000 tons of ilmenite, plus significant heavy mineral operations in Clay County. quantities of leucoxene, staurolite, and In May 1980, Associated Minerals Consolimonazite. dated Ltd. (AMC) of Sydney, New South Rare-Earth Minerals.-AMC produced Wales, Australia, acquired the properties monazite concentrates as a byproduct from of Titanium Enterprises at Green Cove its operations in Clay County. Florida was
PAGE 10
10 MINERALS YEARBOOK, 1980 the only domestic producer of rare earths in Clay County, decreased in 1980. Floridi from mineral sands mining, was the only producer of zircon concen Titanium.-Du Pont and AMC, Clay trates in the United States. County, produced titanium concentrates for use in titanium dioxide pigment manufac'State mineral specialist, Bureau of Mines, Tuscaloosa4 ture Ala. Zircon-Production and value of zircon State geologist, Florida Bureau of Geology, Tallahassee,l concentrates from Du Pont and AMC, both Table 7.-Principal producers Commodity and company Address Type of activity County Cement: Florida Mining & Materials Corp Box 23965 Plant -------Hernando. Tampa. FL 33622 General Portland, Inc ------12700 Park Central Place Plants ------Dade and Suite 2100 Hillsborough. Dallas, TX 75251 Lonestar Florida, Inc ------Box 2035 PVS Plant -------Dade. Hialeah, FL 33012 Rinker Portland Cement Corp _Box 650679 ___-do ---Do. Miami, FL 33165 Clays: Florida Mining & Materials Corp Box 6 Open pit mine -Hernando. Brooksville, FL 33512 Mid-Florida Mining -------Box 68-F .--do -----Marion. Lowell, FL 32663 Pennsylvania Glass Sand Corp_Berkeley Springs, WV 35411 -----do -----Gadsden. Gypsum (calcined): Jim Walter Corp ---------Box 135 Plant -------DuvaL Jacksonville, FL 32226 National Gypsum Co-------4100 First Intl. Bldg. ----do -----Hillsborough. Dallas, TX 75270 United States Gypsum Co----101 South Wacker Dr. ----do -----Duval. Chicago, IL 60606 Lime: Chemical Lime, Inc ..--------Box 250 _ _ _ do ----Hernando. Ocala, FL 32670 Dixie Lime & Stone Co. -----Drawer 217 --do -----Sumter. Sumterville, FL 33585 Magnesium compounds: Basic Magnesia. Inc.z ------Box 160 ----do -----Gulf. Port St. Joe, FL 32456 Peat F. K Stearns Peat -------Route 1, Box 542D Bog --------Hillsborough. Dover, FL 33527 Peace River Peat Co -------Box l192 Bog --------Polk. Bartow, FL 33830 Superior Peat & Soil -------Box 2688 Bog --------Highlands. Sebring, FL 33870 Perlite (expanded). Airlite Procesing Corp. of Route 2, Box 740 Plant -------Indian River. Florida. Vero Beach, FL 32960 Armstrong Cork Co -------Box 1991 ....----do -----Escambia. Pensacola, FL 32589 Chemrock Corp ----------End of Osage Street ----do -----Duval. Nashville. TN 37208 W IL Grace & Co. --------62 Whittemore Ave. _-__do -----Broward. Cambridge, MA 02140 Phcuphate rock: Agrico Chemical Co -------Box 3166 Open pit mines Polk. Tulsa, OK 74101 and plants. Borden, Inc -Box 790 Open pit mine and Hillsborough Plant City, FL 33566 plant. and Polk. Brewater Phosphates -----Bradley,FL 33835 -----------..do---Do. CF Industries --------Box790 ....---do -----Hardee. Plant City, FL 33566 Estech. Inc--Box 208 Open pit mines __ Polk. Bartow, FL 33830 Gardinier, Inc -----------Box 3269 Open pit mine and Do. Tampa, FL 33601 plant' International Minerals & Box867 Open pit mines -Do. Chemical Corp. Bartow, FL 38830 Mobil Oil Corp.-------Box 311 ----do-----Do. Nichols, FL 33863 Occidental Petroleum Corp ...White Springs, FL 32096 ----Open pit mine -Hamilton. US.S Agri-Chemicals Inc..Box 867 _-_-do -----Polk. Fort Meade, FL 33841 W. R. Grace & Co ---------Box 471 Open pit mine and Do. Bartow, FL 33830 plant See footnotes at end of table.
PAGE 11
THE MINERAL INDUSTRY OF FLORIDA 11 Table 7.-Principal producers -Continued Commodity and company Address Type of activity County Sand and gravel: Florida Rock Industries, Inc., 744 Riverside Ave. Pits --------Clay, Lake, Shands & Baker. .Jacksonville. FL 32201 Lee, Putnam. General Development Corp --1111 South Bayshore Dr. -._do -----St. Lucie, and Miami, FL 33131 Sarasota. E. R. Jahna Industries, Inc., First & East Tillman _ _ _ do -----Glades, Lake, Ortona Sand Co. Div. Lake Wales, Fl 33853 Polk. Silver Sand Co. of Clermont Inc -Route 1, Box US 1 Pit --------Lake. Clermont, FL 32711 Staurolite: E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co _ _ DuPont Bldg. D-10084 Mines and plantsClay. Wilmington, DE 19898 Stone: Florida Crushed Stone Co ----Box 317 Quarries -----Hernando and Leesburg, FL 32748 Sumter. Florida Rock Industries, Inc.5 __ Box 4467 _-do -----Collier, Lee, Jacksonville, FL 32201 Sumter, Suwannee. Lone Star Florida, Inc ------Box 6097 Quarry ------Dade. Fort Lauderdale, FL 33310 Rinker Southeastern Materials, Box 2634 Quarries -----Do. Inc. Hialeah, FL 33012 Vulcan Materials Co -------Box 7324-A ___-do -----Broward and Birmingham, AL 35223 Dade. Titanium concentrates: Associated Minerals Consolidated Green Cove Springs, Mine and plant Clay. Ltd. FL 32043 E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co.6 DuPont Bldg. D-10084 Mines and plantsDo. Wilmington, DE 19898 1Also stone. 2Also lime. 'Also phosphate rock and exfoliated vermiculite. 4Also elemental phosphorus. sAlso sand and gravel. SAlso zircon concentrate and rare-earth oxides and thorium oxide in monazite concentrate.
PAGE 12
-FLORIDA-GEOLOGICAL-SURVEY COPYRIGHT NOTICE © [year of publication as printed] Florida Geological Survey [source text] The Florida Geological Survey holds all rights to the source text of this electronic resource on behalf of the State of Florida. The Florida Geological Survey shall be considered the copyright holder for the text of this publication. Under the Statutes of the State of Florida (FS 257.05; 257.105, and 377.075), the Florida Geologic Survey (Tallahassee, FL), publisher of the Florida Geologic Survey, as a division of state government, makes its documents public (i.e., published) and extends to the state's official agencies and libraries, including the University of Florida's Smathers Libraries, rights of reproduction. The Florida Geological Survey has made its publications available to the University of Florida, on behalf of the State University System of Florida, for the purpose of digitization and Internet distribution. The Florida Geological Survey reserves all rights to its publications. All uses, excluding those made under "fair use" provisions of U.S. copyright legislation (U.S. Code, Title 17, Section 107), are restricted. Contact the Florida Geological Survey for additional information and permissions.
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'2017-03-09T11:01:40-05:00'
describe
'3094' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPLD' 'sip-files00002.txt'
2e0be01c082a9e864d39f2b2a1b9fe7d
53dfa56ac11fd40bb0d8c8b55ad5119f250cd3c1
describe
Invalid character
WARNING CODE 'Daitss::Anomaly' Invalid character
'9510' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPLE' 'sip-files00002thm.jpg'
60a521cfafe794dad5c049a39cfb4893
a1a4cc72e520c623cfb4c4699476bfa5793c5ef3
'2017-03-09T11:02:21-05:00'
describe
'186965' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPLF' 'sip-files00003.jp2'
90f535c9508c4ff7245f31a7d5378db2
e5af394eb24df2e13e509c8745f24200d1114c77
describe
'143264' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPLG' 'sip-files00003.jpg'
99b54dc132a3f27a9920da93453519be
e805131386645961044c5bf026975a98d8343285
'2017-03-09T11:02:19-05:00'
describe
'80772' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPLH' 'sip-files00003.pdf'
dc077ac9add8174080bcd64267cbf42c
0fb53636f6217c949bde7d93a6c0989e537286ba
'2017-03-09T11:02:17-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPLH-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080623_AAAPLH-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'105856' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPLI' 'sip-files00003.pro'
d3a5efeca9200baf3213d077b84bb8d0
e62957ca1c0158eade3fa780b7e4c22a582fd0df
'2017-03-09T11:01:43-05:00'
describe
'40981' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPLJ' 'sip-files00003.QC.jpg'
9ae8814c718816533896d7fc08725c7c
40accea425d32909b0bef33d0a9780a0d2ff8a41
'2017-03-09T11:02:13-05:00'
describe
'992476' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPLK' 'sip-files00003.tif'
390525c220807475f4d9806576262091
6501590569c88c1c7d1c0be519e412f3792f11fa
'2017-03-09T11:01:55-05:00'
describe
'4622' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPLL' 'sip-files00003.txt'
a0784091e650c62e7b418517c353a1dc
bf7a61ec765178f3cbf6bba5c395ca70503cbd51
'2017-03-09T11:02:14-05:00'
describe
'10804' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPLM' 'sip-files00003thm.jpg'
f69b20c045bfc03bbd55e85c58724d2e
52fcc252615c1d550971a2f4f4806dbe6cdee711
describe
'228224' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPLN' 'sip-files00004.jp2'
aba0fca97ccb8ac667cb8bcb7c503069
03c843c9741ffacac4f034916c63b4e3da59430d
describe
'181987' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPLO' 'sip-files00004.jpg'
9aa7f97718028fead532159e38364932
b47bc8e2390aafb2a248177eac641b87216b1096
describe
'95555' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPLP' 'sip-files00004.pdf'
6e27fdd0c6dfd11c466b4bad997eb62b
a11975b76cc4a6f3c7cf0d983336350dee9ea9d8
'2017-03-09T11:02:11-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPLP-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080623_AAAPLP-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-09T11:02:12-05:00'
normalize
'115137' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPLQ' 'sip-files00004.pro'
eaa2bb41f7e26083426481d77d44b5f4
5ebec5cf0ad917f7943ff0c531848f4a33cb9f09
'2017-03-09T11:01:47-05:00'
describe
'51734' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPLR' 'sip-files00004.QC.jpg'
604af35cf20d64d04562fb69a05737e1
a9c891f4d95604e322d54795016131b4e3e4f314
describe
'979564' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPLS' 'sip-files00004.tif'
411aa161bb818ea861626d6c11188250
8c495522c0c0c7c1c88720804ba754a7545c37a8
describe
'5119' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPLT' 'sip-files00004.txt'
0c13a24f122c3ba5eb275e1b317ba1f6
43335d8aa09cc315030201c8b6378b180cf4b4d8
'2017-03-09T11:01:50-05:00'
describe
'12849' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPLU' 'sip-files00004thm.jpg'
e425305017ec6e61c5aa49007d9f95ca
6501c3d86e6503a04024f3a9b879c91ac59767ea
'2017-03-09T11:01:52-05:00'
describe
'154372' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPLV' 'sip-files00005.jp2'
1cc7c05cedbb6dd5e18d694d17d6b444
0cc9f5acada7f2d8be013bc52bf985ef063e4a4d
describe
'124302' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPLW' 'sip-files00005.jpg'
726ec4824604ee7cde6bd0adb90b711e
f508a34841468f5dba0ac686f1b9d93e57a3aeca
'2017-03-09T11:01:49-05:00'
describe
'65961' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPLX' 'sip-files00005.pdf'
f22e624330dccc133b165295a3e7db99
496eb98ccbd19a428364e30b625da0f39c286293
'2017-03-09T11:02:05-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPLX-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080623_AAAPLX-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-09T11:02:07-05:00'
normalize
'63221' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPLY' 'sip-files00005.pro'
6ecc72f2f8a8e048c8f483ebe4c9f086
70c8ab39cba96183149f41bc0f528d1b00c1c6c3
describe
'36373' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPLZ' 'sip-files00005.QC.jpg'
fc07a4851cd8e793a26c9c336206da4b
7eb5b9e9a8dba5816c431f16ae460f2aee3ad5dd
describe
'998608' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPMA' 'sip-files00005.tif'
f583825da4f3be9f0451accf0a2c1c58
fecf3eb59de819e4b1dc60e712a0266dddf3d351
describe
'2629' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPMB' 'sip-files00005.txt'
afcbcfbf00a64db335002672bb67c0f6
c534d1f3f295066f1d3e4919dff20e070fcae307
'2017-03-09T11:02:00-05:00'
describe
'9381' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPMC' 'sip-files00005thm.jpg'
307affd62d771f699f1ee8343e37e0d6
8dd556d650d04f6d6f8444438045706594ede762
'2017-03-09T11:02:04-05:00'
describe
'269185' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPMD' 'sip-files00006.jp2'
3729118ff9e3035bb4f240bd4bf54d80
100a44561f9614673a5403eeb7edb9963bd90a6a
describe
'212414' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPME' 'sip-files00006.jpg'
153e6045dd6e8a71cb1270b92bc88b6f
b02a4cf8e8210d98972288b4ec118197e6d8e90b
'2017-03-09T11:01:38-05:00'
describe
'117380' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPMF' 'sip-files00006.pdf'
e0859b50c462e341bb69e79320d011c1
5abaa1c5ebe879ae43830fac976058152a9ef16e
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPMF-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080623_AAAPMF-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-09T11:02:22-05:00'
describe
'2017-03-09T11:02:09-05:00'
normalize
'112910' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPMG' 'sip-files00006.pro'
1aa01feb6d90a0627f974409eb4e9d83
aa617da12e3871a4bbd96f6d9db6d5bef7a7fa53
describe
'59063' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPMH' 'sip-files00006.QC.jpg'
3c4a75dc983547f5ad19e946685d0390
d4c383e4b4a642d9f1ac96b1915d2b25943bf0a0
'2017-03-09T11:02:15-05:00'
describe
'987824' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPMI' 'sip-files00006.tif'
66ee5c4ae883af96a311fede2ddffe1a
558b3362eb58d85531e5394df4d1b7acc82a6a49
describe
'4666' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPMJ' 'sip-files00006.txt'
4b513f148883c4bd631d4bc92695d44c
0b5c91fb3c309022636e89610b10fef56745150d
describe
'13683' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPMK' 'sip-files00006thm.jpg'
f5606722d0802539d578c5094bf828e7
863526e41892caade90000e378fde0aa2c7977fb
describe
'270089' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPML' 'sip-files00007.jp2'
f29c78824c4e12905972b44706a66e36
a135f0b3b7c99b3c53022bfe4c12b385cdff2ea6
describe
'214340' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPMM' 'sip-files00007.jpg'
0c618aba18093328677aadabaeecd27f
f27c0f380ec73c2e1a36d497da25df7f8e435363
describe
'116955' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPMN' 'sip-files00007.pdf'
3698f631ae3c1ae525b02351102f7a9e
f7d9be74a3335640da1a9040537514eb29fe6872
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPMN-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080623_AAAPMN-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'119536' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPMO' 'sip-files00007.pro'
9460a5b87f6b012fa466bbc3af326bc8
536e6bc0f6b2081fb44b4c9ddcef5d9687b2b402
describe
'60846' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPMP' 'sip-files00007.QC.jpg'
56e640cea21f1ab355e7e56fc8dafc9e
75b61b3759185eb77ca8a6ba2b2d3955ac3b7309
describe
'986712' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPMQ' 'sip-files00007.tif'
28b81dd488bdabf0c2a77b91ed87e8e5
c8d16250894d002c82f1d60a16b17defc71d3f36
describe
'4897' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPMR' 'sip-files00007.txt'
918037b0a12f04678124b42a420d747b
0e024248bf24f294b8ddaf87894e8ec8e1e9d71d
describe
'14235' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPMS' 'sip-files00007thm.jpg'
5ad9dd6867ec73c05045f3129ea197f0
d514bb00ef2f850d4893059389996121b8121577
describe
'282592' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPMT' 'sip-files00008.jp2'
eb30874c3b427a92218bc835e207098a
3dd16116909c19ab8b306066b2d92fb569074e2e
describe
'225905' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPMU' 'sip-files00008.jpg'
659e474eace5add293be4d8662b00001
a2f69d33d472ed189309bc4a7c7cb606be20dad5
describe
'121475' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPMV' 'sip-files00008.pdf'
e6dab270ff768769f43373eb705ca773
4a6c0df638dd1b6e3d24157b61c8004487d5699b
'2017-03-09T11:01:53-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPMV-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080623_AAAPMV-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'121170' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPMW' 'sip-files00008.pro'
ed7bd91a51b52f4e774c76c9cd5eccfe
d7939cbce228c85c07664bd1f556fb1c30c061ec
describe
'61564' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPMX' 'sip-files00008.QC.jpg'
7500471cb39274688e7d74424980f298
b71a038a9de040a154f850f8b741943cb6334107
describe
'973136' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPMY' 'sip-files00008.tif'
4736af84e2e5c9f2a7f57cdcb03b3cc6
b936b71f73704e60775c26a2338ce4bf6541ed23
describe
'5031' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPMZ' 'sip-files00008.txt'
ebaebc649c156c892e4895b1ea28b2af
00f59957e513583ce6bcefb2fe843a327c12dc88
describe
'14286' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPNA' 'sip-files00008thm.jpg'
dc07dc1e7750dd5a2e0d106fae063843
0b714f94cb1478e98ad1cd3cda634b7f8a03c510
describe
'184679' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPNB' 'sip-files00009.jp2'
fd21dc99ae12e9627582f4d2c0e3bafe
1f3743fc638c130ba20db72f4a90eda90c1ba48f
describe
'137147' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPNC' 'sip-files00009.jpg'
f3ad9d23516ec5c5503f7d3fb02104fc
dd1f8621c618d5d39d66d21a5d583a7a3d5ef545
describe
'77739' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPND' 'sip-files00009.pdf'
2348e435f7a7502e7d2414d18f21cd1b
32026ab348f09b8227821c90580b4bf86db006b6
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPND-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080623_AAAPND-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'95819' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPNE' 'sip-files00009.pro'
394f95f3a8dca55e5fc02e4e2f5bf65a
a03eb04dbe56e70cc802419a0ded833a9a99c25d
describe
'40181' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPNF' 'sip-files00009.QC.jpg'
e1bebda8844aa2b02b4ee791cf842e87
372c6cb568f8568b96b5a853ae1ae4a205c49e5a
describe
'1048608' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPNG' 'sip-files00009.tif'
92306914d91cb25ca7918f80fe6953f2
a5245f64045b6e9233139ad497a8371169ca0dce
describe
'4426' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPNH' 'sip-files00009.txt'
869f333f4b97a392d2fe9c2c1ec16eb1
c7f1552b7950c1a37e9116851a584d58bacee403
describe
'10102' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPNI' 'sip-files00009thm.jpg'
9cf7e59a8e5a69a4feee619817f3d797
2ceecbca14d43359c82e0f71a1491f6075e226dc
describe
'223739' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPNJ' 'sip-files00010.jp2'
c6c40dca1306167cd45ae407a9f6e80d
306c4f32c99b94c539a30710227ddba15784fd0e
'2017-03-09T11:01:56-05:00'
describe
'175580' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPNK' 'sip-files00010.jpg'
ab6f3f86ad4ae80704061c947766a85c
ed5f2dc2766efc23e8aa8b56e2bcd1d20a102c1a
describe
'94482' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPNL' 'sip-files00010.pdf'
89ad6ad26f82fab5be76a8034c4eb64d
54977bbdddd80e33a52486757cd2348bdd30a406
'2017-03-09T11:01:41-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPNL-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080623_AAAPNL-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'116902' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPNM' 'sip-files00010.pro'
1e97b7c3ff4c3c60d1ab36b0dc88a839
c43ef9b1c80c09d31d54afc2b3948ea5b4f44e1b
describe
'49439' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPNN' 'sip-files00010.QC.jpg'
0f47547e9ba5839b9dbbe70bbe695e9a
140010d4f22f522fb8463ae737e2428a1d544743
describe
'997832' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPNO' 'sip-files00010.tif'
7663040fb95ba263c3700533c24794ee
3635b9dcbef8a5f1cd7d5a4863ab717ac55e361b
describe
'5108' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPNP' 'sip-files00010.txt'
e1ec77bcb8a1aaa859dc61224ea18a9c
c43b7e8c44a1c36c9bb6830baefba57118ceca44
describe
'11829' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPNQ' 'sip-files00010thm.jpg'
1249f55ba29f5fc4efb39d2af6bead19
adaa9ff3e216916d160140c9aa0ec3f8c5cad228
describe
'153843' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPNR' 'sip-files00011.jp2'
7e9a5fb2058ffd68d9a429f93c655d6f
44a329850a4518abaa1b0348988d2f73ee6b189c
describe
'113827' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPNS' 'sip-files00011.jpg'
841bcb04ac9dad53a1a72a77a28840fd
ef06fe87a559eca5836d764bdc5a86268ee77b75
describe
'65779' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPNT' 'sip-files00011.pdf'
f506d7940155a9d046f73f29022b9a60
c5c5d18c710ec713e6004f5635a00f0169ab743b
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPNT-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080623_AAAPNT-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-09T11:02:24-05:00'
describe
normalize
'85221' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPNU' 'sip-files00011.pro'
741416ba71c617a86303af42f1fc8b9b
7343cb23b377ac83ae64cb824bfcf92f2d71e749
describe
'37803' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPNV' 'sip-files00011.QC.jpg'
8547f3c291d8be7f9500eb08e84e6105
b4a7fb701f4ba01a97e67a8f60547dfd93b16ec0
describe
'1007460' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPNW' 'sip-files00011.tif'
6b76a6290b36acd074611f65bf5b51c4
3d1b05000c9de6e2979df503d9e25e4eee906492
describe
'3928' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPNX' 'sip-files00011.txt'
f9517d0eafca495f036023bca6699ab2
5f2db649044fde1412a816a50759f3671c6502cd
'2017-03-09T11:01:37-05:00'
describe
'10460' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPNY' 'sip-files00011thm.jpg'
b79cb39b41f850d858873e26b861b8f6
f724c3a2c61bcaf512e307da52b33bb62567ffad
describe
'76740' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPNZ' 'sip-files00012.jp2'
50d09ce9b7eee81e3319d1d3688caf4a
e1c3128d952be2a87463eb64781107e22840aacf
describe
'65534' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPOA' 'sip-files00012.jpg'
1e531741ab25ac5e7eae15ac37e68b54
aea5e4db7ebc0234b82b08a90e08cc6584bcba4d
describe
'33530' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPOB' 'sip-files00012.pdf'
85de2ce1d02e38ff2992d868c71c81e9
e84f2b8326a5540a541f40bb6f43ad4e875d7ccb
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPOB-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080623_AAAPOB-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'43130' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPOC' 'sip-files00012.pro'
3136843ea811aaafda21973ea6aa816c
0ccacb3771004dfef42b5954e6d8fd8771a7e39e
describe
'21478' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPOD' 'sip-files00012.QC.jpg'
92c7d1ccea2abf23998d69eeb6194df0
715c53b2b89cedd71b65622789d1012ce92f3f10
describe
'932200' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPOE' 'sip-files00012.tif'
dde2936f2bc64d04fca462f2849b33a5
84384aea7fbe5862e2c3ca843a3f782a31fbb472
describe
'2297' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPOF' 'sip-files00012.txt'
a6f5c531ca16987c1e1897775e5202db
aa9156acab91edd7e0219f1de6ac4fb24b65770d
describe
'6117' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPOG' 'sip-files00012thm.jpg'
839eb5dbf8aa4d2b4f39e8c4845d4462
a2cc6dc96807b9b942cd007b2ce96178e4d87466
describe
'153168' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPOH' 'sip-filescopyright.jp2'
cd965abaafb5da42dc6c8def20d374f4
b811824c94aa0ae5a5f04cfb64b27e9e0927243a
describe
'103670' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPOI' 'sip-filescopyright.jpg'
5ed6af3ef67a43b6eae26d2c3f29a461
df6b6cf922cb15af268ddbbb355d1acd688d22ee
describe
'71602' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPOJ' 'sip-filescopyright.pdf'
2c1d663b2cdba364fdbeccdc9f6dfa42
4426a49e14f35a3d256435e6a08f40139742b8ba
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPOJ-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080623_AAAPOJ-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'35816' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPOK' 'sip-filescopyright.pro'
44f0ad97176e3f4dc59d077cbdf4b874
9275912abe38fc6fd9ae3acbc7bd5b26a42c5755
describe
'35083' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPOL' 'sip-filescopyright.QC.jpg'
28180ee8185b27af4702a664eb2b5d1b
f0e1d4e0f0dcb1a265ec575f3d87a525ada2ad6d
describe
'1060432' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPOM' 'sip-filescopyright.tif'
3fb5804adc03d99007a6d924e54c06a4
95324b28ce20880049810f4d44d1c58936f9f2c4
describe
'1329' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPON' 'sip-filescopyright.txt'
15f2bbd34b776d39b92ffb1c4f760b27
b0251f2ed30996bc7ed3d8efa687abc9a6800fa9
describe
Invalid character
Invalid character
'10085' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPOO' 'sip-filescopyrightthm.jpg'
b0566b6a6e9b9bfb3fa924203ff11cf8
63d705588c1580afc86f43138330df2fe31f906d
describe
'1009637' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPOP' 'sip-filesUF00001156.pdf'
823a63ff307e862df52d4b6a31837a52
2a5deea74fac0a6ac69c56fbc0cafde24e2a4299
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPOP-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080623_AAAPOP-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-09T11:01:59-05:00'
normalize
'26116' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPOQ' 'sip-filesUF00001156_00001.mets'
a5ded603dd6c17666f2dfd477492f4e0
1b4a218d5c47f98160f3cf7b7d11fdddc4a1e7f5
describe
TargetNamespace.1: Expecting namespace 'http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/', but the target namespace of the schema document is 'http://digital.uflib.ufl.edu/metadata/ufdc2/'.
'2017-03-09T11:02:46-05:00' 'mixed'
xml resolution
http://www.loc.gov/standards/xlink.xsd
BROKEN_LINK schema http://www.loc.gov/standards/xlink.xsd
TargetNamespace.1: Expecting namespace 'http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/', but the target namespace of the schema document is 'http://digital.uflib.ufl.edu/metadata/ufdc2/'.
'33088' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACBfileF20080623_AAAPOT' 'sip-filesUF00001156_00001.xml'
f3eb83c3dea311ffa5767ca05d4b161e
71f126b0a650c9449360334c3332e5c93a5ab96d
describe
xml resolution
http://www.loc.gov/standards/xlink.xsd
http://www.loc.gov/standards/xlink.xsd