https://calgary.ctvnews.ca/43-cp-rail-cars-carrying-potash-derail-east-of-fort-macleod-alta-1.5914463
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Potash derailment Fort Macleod
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The video I seen sure was not potash … any of it
Oh well they will drive the price of that up 2x regardless
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Some solution mines like the one near Belle Plain produce white 0-0-62.
Can disolve the fine product to produce 0-0-12 liquid. More for vegtable fertigation etc.
As TSIPP says the iron is an impurity and doesn't go into solution. Just floats around on the bottom.
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Originally posted by sawfly1 View PostNow the white phosphate freaked me out this spring , I was sure they had screwed up and gave me a blend, but they swore it is 11 51 0.
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Originally posted by helmsdale View Postwhite... as in all white? I had some this year that was green, some that was pure brown, and some that had maybe 30% white prills intermixed with brown.
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Originally posted by helmsdale View Postwhite... as in all white? I had some this year that was green, some that was pure brown, and some that had maybe 30% white prills intermixed with brown.
Red Potash vs. White Potash - What Is The Difference?
Farm Journal
By DAVIS MICHAELSEN September 10, 2012
Potash accounts for 90% of all the potassium applied to farmland soil in the U.S. in the form of Muriate of Potash (MOP). Potash ore is mined from a half mile beneath the Earth's surface with Canada leading global potash production, followed by Belarus, Russia, and China. Once potash ore has been brought to the surface, it can be processed in one of two ways.
White potash is the result of a dissolution and recrystallization process. The ore is dissolved under pressure in hot brine and when the mixture cools, white MOP containing 98% potassium chloride is the produced.
Red potash is first crushed very finely to produce single mineral grains. It is then put through a floatation process and red MOP is skimmed off the top. Traces of iron ore remain in red MOP, giving it a reddish or pink hue, yielding 95% potassium chloride.
Agronomically the two are basically the same. Both red and white MOP lend valuable potassium and chloride to the soil and are equally soluble. Each of the two contain around 47% chloride but because of the process of dissolution and recrystallization that white potash undergoes, red potash tends to be less expensive and more readily available, making it the number one MOP choice for most U.S. growers."
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Originally posted by helmsdale View Postwhite... as in all white? I had some this year that was green, some that was pure brown, and some that had maybe 30% white prills intermixed with brown.
The green shit probably western phosphate out of Pocatello area by truck.
White shit may be Russian.
Depends what the rock looks like at the mine.
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