Minerals and Earths, Ground or Otherwise Treated

Industry report:

Companies in this industry

SIC 3295
MINERALS AND EARTHS, GROUND OR OTHERWISE TREATED

This category includes establishments operating without a mine or quarry and primarily engaged in crushing, grinding, pulverizing, or otherwise preparing clay, ceramic, and refractory minerals; barite; and miscellaneous nonmetallic minerals, excluding fuels. These minerals are the crude products mined by establishments of Industry Groups 145 (clay, ceramic, and refractory minerals) and 149 (miscellaneous nonmetallic minerals, except fuels), and by those mining barite in SIC 1479: Chemical and Fertilizer Mineral Mining, Not Elsewhere Classified. Also included in this category are establishments primarily crushing slag and preparing roofing granules. The improvement or preparation of the minerals and metallic ores and the cleaning and grading of coal are classified in Mining, whether or not the operation is associated with a mine.

NAICS Code(s)

327992 (Ground or Treated Mineral and Earth Manufacturing)

Products in this classification include barium, blast furnace slag, clay for petroleum refining, ground clay, activated clay desiccants, diatomaceous earth, filtering clays, Fuller's earth, kaolin, black lead, mica, pulverized earth, pumice roofing granules, talc, and vermiculite. The value of shipments in this industry tended to spike up and down throughout the 1980s and early 1990s, dropping as low as $1.17 billion in 1985 and rising as high as $1.85 billion in 1993. Fluctuations continued into the late 1990s and early 2000s, as shipments of $2.25 billion in 1997 fell to $2.1 billion in 1999, climbed to $2.17 billion in 2000, and fell to $2.12 billion in 2001.

No single product dominates this industry, with no product taking more than 15 percent of the market. Lightweight aggregate holds the largest share of the market, followed closely by crushed slag, dead-burned magnesia, and natural graphite. A wide range of other materials and earths holds the remaining share of the market. Kaolin was one of the biggest products within the industry in both intake and output, being an ingredient in several products. Once the kaolin was processed, it was sent to many different industries with a wide range of products. The biggest consumer in the early 2000s was the fiber-glass industry. Rubber and elastomeric industries took the next highest share, followed by sanitaryware and filler or extender, refractories, dinnerware, ceramic tile, and electrical porcelain.

The products produced by this industry tended to have a relatively low value compared to their weight. As a result of weight, truck transportation, warehousing, and rail transportation accounted for the highest percentage of the inputs used by the minerals and earths industry in the early 2000s. The raw materials accounted for the next highest percentage of all inputs. The power required to process ground mineral and earth products were also important inputs, with gas and electric utilities accounting for another high percentage of all inputs.

The production of ground minerals and earths was concentrated in five states, with Pennsylvania, Ohio, Illinois, Louisiana, and California accounting for roughly one-third of all product shipments. Pennsylvania was the largest single producing state.

In 2003 the leading companies in the ground minerals and earths industry included Eagle-Picher Industries Inc., of Cincinnati, Ohio, with $685 million in sales; Engelhard Corp. Pigments and Additives of Iselin, New Jersey, with $500 million in sales; and privately owned Edward C. Levy Co. of Detroit, Michigan, with sales of $200 million. Many companies operated out of the Southeastern and Midwestern United States, where abundant supplies of clay (kaolin) were located.

This industry employed an estimated 10,045 people in 2000. The total industry payroll was $368 million. Employment for production workers was expected to decline into the year 2006.

News and information about Minerals and Earths, Ground or Otherwise Treated
Cream Minerals Identifies Heavy Minerals and Rare Earths Potential Within Its Offshore Concession, Sierra Leone.
Marketwire Canada ; October 26, 2009;700+ words
...and more recently Cream Minerals identified heavy minerals and some rare earths in the beach sands and near...Department indicate heavy minerals concentrations. They include...monazite (a source of rare earths) which occur in the offshore...
United States : Cream Minerals Identifies Heavy Minerals and Rare Earths Potential Within Its Offshore Concession, Sierra Leone.
TendersInfo ; October 27, 2009;700+ words
...and more recently Cream Minerals identified heavy minerals and some rare earths in the beach sands and near...Department indicate heavy minerals concentrations. They include...monazite (a source of rare earths) which occur in the offshore...
The U.S. Market for Ground or Treated Minerals and Earths.
M2 Presswire ; March 12, 2003;700+ words
...Market for Ground or Treated Minerals and Earths(C)1994-2003 M2 COMMUNICATIONS...Market for Ground or Treated Minerals and Earths - A member of a collection...Market for Ground or Treated Minerals and Earths Publisher Name: Morton Research...
Matamec's Rare Earths-Yttrium-Zirconium Kipawa Deposit is in Industrial Minerals Magazine September Issue!
Marketwire Canada ; August 31, 2009;700+ words
...a one page article in the Exposure section of the Industrial Minerals magazine September issue. The article "Kipawa heavy rare earths" is presently available on Industrial Minerals website at: indmin.com/Channel/19571/Exposure.html...
Mainstream Minerals Intersects Wide Zones of Uranium, Rare Earths, Rare Metals, Sulfur and Iron at the Phyllis Lake Project, Ignace, Ontario.
TheNewswire.ca ; November 26, 2008;700+ words
...November 26 2008 - Mainstream Minerals Corp. (TSX.V: MJO) and...wide zones of uranium, rare earths, rare metals and other minerals, notably sulfur and iron...Zone Number 1. All of these minerals have significant economic value...
Industrial minerals 1997: Rare earths
Mining Engineering ; June 1, 1998;Hedrick, J B700+ words
...a major importer and exporter of rare earths. Yttrium was not mined or refined domestically...TX. And Grace Davison refined rare earths from rare-earth chloride and other rare...Demand increased, however, for rare earths used in permanent magnets and rare-earth...
Beware: gap in the road ahead: as the Chinese Government's control of its domestic minerals market tightens--coupled with environmental and production issues--there are fears that demand for Rare Earths will outstrip supply.(China Tungsten Industry Association)
Business Asia ; April 1, 2008;Khoury, Andre700+ words
...rare and minor metals, including Rare Earths. But by looking after and protecting...few minor worries. In the case of Rare Earths, in a bid to control supply and ensure...metals. For example, in 2004 the Rare Earths export quota was 48,500 tonnes. Last...
China effort to lock up its rare earths backfires ; Technological needs, it turns out, might be met by mines elsewhere
International Herald Tribune ; September 26, 2009;Keith Bradsher700+ words
...products that require the minerals. The so-called rare earths are required in products...community" to develop a rare earths mine three months ago...executive of Great Western Minerals Group, a rare-earths miner in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan...
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