The Appalachian Salina
Deposits: Salt, Industry And Geologists
Svitana, Kevin D.
The Department of Geological Sciences, The Ohio State University, 125 S Oval Mall, Columbus, OH 43210
The exploitation of
the Appalachian Upper Silurian Salina Deposits has a unique history that
reflects the evolving role of geologists
in exploring resources in the
Appalachian Basin. This paper addresses the relationship between
geologists
and
the development of this salt resource since the late 1700's. The Salina Deposits
formed in shallow evaporite seas where halite precipitated. In the Appalachian
Basin, the salt sequences are up to 191 feet thick and now occur between 500 to
9,000 feet below MSL. The Colonial United States obtained most of its salt from
European sources. During the revolutionary war, British embargoes limited salt
supplies, spurring U.S. production. The concentrated brines along the Kanawha
River (WV) became the main source of U.S. salt from the late 1700's through
1860. Exploitation of Kanawha brines led to development of drilling technologies
to extract brines from subsurface "veins." These drilling techniques were later
utilized throughout the Appalachians for the development of coal and petroleum
resources. The salt industry matured in the late 1800's, when larger companies
dominated, and solution and deep mining enhanced salt production. Appalachian
salt production centers shifted to Buffalo, Cleveland, Pittsburgh and
Charleston. In the early 1900's, the Chlor-Alkali industry (electrochemical
production of chlorine, caustic soda and hydrogen from salt brine) stimulated
salt production in Appalachia. Inexpensive hydroelectric power helped the
Buffalo-Niagara region become a center for producing Chlor-Alkali and synthetic
chemicals. Development of the interstate highway system in the late 1950's
created a new demand for highway de-icing salt. Demand was met by increasing
deep mining of Salina salts, which required preparation of environmental impact
assessments for mining permits. The most recent association between the Salina
Deposits and
geologists
resulted from the 1980's hazardous waste regulations.
Wastes from synthetic chemical industries required
geologists
to modify their
skills to assess and treat pollutants.