- Trona - Wikipedia
The trona near Green River, Wyoming, is the largest known deposit in the world and lies in layered evaporite deposits below ground, where the trona was deposited in a lake during the Paleogene Period [9] Trona has also been mined at Lake Magadi in the Kenyan Rift Valley for nearly 100 years
- Trona - Wyoming Mining Association
Trona is a sodium carbonate compound that is processed into soda ash or bicarbonate of soda, or baking soda, as it is commonly known Wyoming has the world’s largest deposit of trona, supplying about 90% of the nation’s soda ash
- WSGS - Trona - Wyoming
Trona, or natural soda ash, is a sodium sesquicarbonate compound that occurs as an evaporite mineral in the Wilkins Peak Member of the Eocene Green River Formation in southwest Wyoming
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- Trona - Wyoming Energy Authority
Trona is a sodium carbonate compound found as an evaporite mineral in the Green River Formation in southwest Wyoming Trona is refined to produce soda ash, commonly known as baking soda
- A look at Wyoming’s world of trona 1,600 feet underground
There was a giant lake, which helped form layers of trona – some of the world’s largest deposits It’s a white-ish, flaky, translucent mineral Globally, many rely on Wyoming for it, because it goes into everyday things like windows, beer bottles, laundry detergent and deodorant
- Trona, CA - DesertUSA
The small desert town of Trona holds a lot of history and offers modern living at an affordable price Over the years not only has Trona preserved its history, it has also grown and changed with the times
- Trona | Sodium Sulfate, Natural Deposit Uses | Britannica
Trona, an evaporite mineral, hydrated sodium bicarbonate [Na3H (CO3)2·2H2O], occasionally encountered as a saline lake deposit or evaporation product and as an efflorescence on arid soil Usually associated with natron, thermonatrite, halite, and gypsum, it occurs near Memphis, in the Lower Nile
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