<<–2/”>a >em>Minerals of Haryana
A host of mineral occurrences have enriched the state of Haryana. The minerals occurring in this state are primarily china clay, limestone, dolomite, quartz/ silica sand, quartzite, slate. Other minerals, such as, barytes, calcite, feldspar, marble, copper, tin and tungsten are noteworthy. Among building stones, granite, slate, marble, quartzite and sandstone are conspicuous. In addition, a number of minerals in minor amount are also reported.
Alkaline Earth : Alkaline earth is the Soil containing excess exchangeable sodium or those influenced by sodium salts, capable of alkaline hydrolysis, e.g. carbonates or bicarbonates of sodium or both and occurs as efflorescence on the surface of the earth. Their presence on the surface produces a barren look to the ground, impoverishing crop production but on the other hand these can be an economical source for sodium carbonate when the concentration of constituent salts increases. Alkaline efflorescence is quite extensive around Gohoro and Durga-ka-Nangal in Mahendragarh District.
Arsenopyrite : Arsenopyrite is present as dissemination in darkgrey quartzite bands of the Alwar Formation in FirozpurJhirka and Nuh tehsils of Gurgaon District. The Metal arsenic is used in medicine Industry.
Baryte : It is valued for its chemical inertness and high specific gravity and used in preparing muds required during oil well drilling. Other important uses are in paint and lithopore industry and as a source material for barium chemicals. It is also used as filler in paper and rubber manufacture. In the state, baryte occurs in minor quantities as very thin (0.02 m to 0.15 m) veins or as lensoidal patches along the foliation planes in calc-schist rocks belonging to Ajabgarh Group of Delhi Supergroup in Masnuta and Bail-ki-Dhani area of Mahendragarh District. It is also reported from Haripur in Ambala District.
Beryl : Beryl is the principal source of beryllium metal which is lighter than alluminium. When alloyed with copper and after suitable heat treatment, the Alloy develops high tensile strength and ability to withstand repeated Stress. Since the advent of atomic energy, beryl has become very important because beryllium is used as a moderator in nuclear reactor. A small quantity is used in the chemical industry in the manufacture of beryllium salts and ceramic glaze. The green transparent variety of beryl is a precious stone and known as emerald. In Haryana, large crystals of beryl have been recorded from a few pegmatites adjacent to Bail-ki-Dhani, Masnuta and Sarai in Mahendragarh District, but no workable deposits exist in the area.
Building Stone : Haryana is famous for its slate deposits, which are extensively quarried and used as ornamental, building and decorative stones and forms an important source of foreign currency. The slates are generally of greyish and greyish black colour, but black, greenish black and multicoloured slates are also not uncommon. Owing to stains of hydrous ferric oxide, the slates of deep brick-red, greyish purple and brownish colour are also available. The multicoloured variety is mainly exported. Other prominent building materials include marble, limestone, sandstone, quartzite and granite.
- a) Slate : In Haryana slate is associated with the Ajabgarh Group of Delhi Supergroup. The chief deposits of slate occur in Mahendragarh District and are located near Kund, Bahali , Rampura. In Kund area alone, slate reserves are estimated at 8.78 mt (much of it mined), out of which nearly 60% is of multicoloured variety (UNFC Classification : 334). Other important deposits in the area are located near Bujhar and Ganiar. About 7.5cm to 12.5cm thick poor quality slate bands occur near Basai Meo in Gurgaon District.
- b) Marble : Impure calc-silicate rocks or micaceous impure marble of Ajabgarh Group are mostly confined to Mahendragarh District, and are quarried at Dholera, Meghot Hala, Dhancholi, Gangutana and Beharipur which extends for about 3km and is about 100 m thick. Together with this, banded variegated marble of different shades is also reported. These are being quarried for making table-tops and other decorative building materials. Other occurrences of marble of different shades are found near Gangutana, Masnuta, Bail-ki-Dhani, Islampur, Khalra, Rasulpur . Gohoro , Niaz Alipur and Dhonkhera.
- c) Quartzite : The Alwar and Ajabgarh Groups have yielded good quality quartzite for use as building material. All along the Ajabgarh Group, several quarries exist in Faridabad and Gurgaon districts. In Rohtak District, these are being worked out in Guraora-Guriani area. In Mahendragarh District, these are quarried at Mandlana, Berondla, Luninasibpur, Gohoro and near Gaonri. Fissile quartzites are worked for roofing and other masonary blocks at various places in Mahendragarh District such as Sareli, Tehla, Mukandpura, Panchnota and Sarai, while almost all the quartzite hills of the District are worked for railway ballasts and concrete aggregates specially at Balina, Rajawas, Khaspur, Atela, Jhojhu Kalan, Azamnagar, Tankri and Dantal.
- d) Granite : Inselbergs of granite in the state are found in the Bhiwani District and the important occurrences are located near Dulheri, Khanak, Dadam, Dharan, Riwasa and Tosham. Isolated hillocks of granite to the south west of the above cluster occur at Nakkipur and Pahari in the same District. In Mahendragarh District, granite is exposed at Dhanota, Kultajpur, Maroli and Mukundpur. All these deposits are quarried to meet the local demand for construction- related purposes.
- e) Sandstone: Sandstone beds belonging to Kasauli, Dagshai, Subathu and certain bands in Nahans provide large source of good quality building material in Ambala District. Kundis or stone bowls are also locally made from some of these sandstones. Sandstone, used as building material is found near Kalka. Boulders, cobbles and pebbles, transported by the Ghaggar River are worked out near Panchkula and Ambala districts for construction work.
Calcite : Calcite veins are normally associated with the Ajabgarh rocks and are mostly confined to Mahendragarh District. About 50m long and 10m wide calcite vein, associated with quartz veins, occur near Raghunathpura. Another calcite vein, measuring about 20m long and 5m wide also observed in its vicinity. Both these occurrences are of high quality but the purer and transparent variety of Iceland Spar is rare. Near Masnuta, a calcite vein, extending about 45m long and 1m wide, occurs in association with pegmatite. All these veins have been quarried in the past. Two to three veins of calcite occur in the Mundia hill and Sonaro-ki-Pahari of the Khalra group of hills, Bail-ki-Dhani and Panchnota. Transparent calcite in association with white milky calcite has been reported from the Rasulpur hill. Pure crystallized, transparent calcite is mainly used in making optical instruments. Poor quality calcite at present is being used for up-grading limestone.
China Clay : Pegmatite intrusions in the Delhi Supergroup have given rise to workable clay deposits in Faridabad and Gurgaon districts. The important occurrences are located near Alipur, Arangpur, Ghamrauj, Ghosgarh, and Sikandarpur. Other occurrences in the area are located near Kasan Ghata Manger and Nathupura. The clay contains mostly poorly crystallized kaolinite with little quartz. Chemical analyses of clay from different occurrences indicate that silica is normally over 60% while alumina is around 20% and that these are of refractory type.
Copper :The main occurrences of copper explored so far are present around Khodana, Teejanwali hill and GolwaGangutana in Mahendragarh District. Chalcopyrite grains along with pyrite, pyrrhotite and arsenopyrite occur as dissemination near Rojka Meo and Indri in Gurgaon District. Malachite stains are observed in rocks of Ajabgarh Group of Datla hill near Raghunathpura, Ghataser, Dondkhoro, Gohoro, Meghot-Hala , Zainpur, Dholera and Pholera villages in the southern part of Mahendragarh District. Specks of pyrite and chalcopyrite are also noticed in the marble of Dhani.
Friable Quartzite: Friable quartzite having high silica content is easily amenable to crushing in the manufacture of glass. Weathering of this quartzite produces good morrum and angular sand suitable for building purpose. Such materials are found to accumulate in the numerous nala beds, traversing the Alwar quartzite hills in Faridabad and Gurgaon districts. There are many sand quarries in the Arangpur (28o21’: 77o16’) area and have reached a depth of 20 m. Gritty quartzite at Bajada Pahari is also friable, but limited in its extent. A narrow zone of friable quartzite about 1.2m to 1.5m wide and traceable for 30m along strike, is seen west of Manesar, which is suitable for manufacture of low grade glass only. In Bhiwani District, a white friable quartzite about 200m in length and upto four metre thick occurs near Pachopa Kalan and the friable zone is confined maximum to one metre depth from surface.
Garnet : The Ajabgarh schists and gneisses around Gohoro, Masnuta and Gangutana in Mahendragarh District are highly garnetiferous. The garnets are pink in colour, translucent to opaque and vary in size from minute grains to about one centimeter in diameter. They are associated with staurolite crystals of various shapes and sizes. Near the contact of Alwar micaceous quartzite of Sareli-Tehla ridge, with the Ajabgarh calc-argillaceous rocks, bigger crystals of garnet have developed but concentration is low. In Gurgaon District, thin bands of grey coloured, soft, garnetiferous mica-schist are seen west of Haryahera. Garnets here are generally quite big, about 3cm in diameter, but smaller crystals are not uncommon. West of Raisina, the Light coloured schists are richer in garnet.
Gold : The incidence of gold occurrence has been reported by GSI in the Siwalik belt and adjoining recent/ sub-recent alluvial terrain in parts of Yamuna Nagar and Ambala districts. In Jaffarpur Jafari, Katgarh and Darpur areas the values from the 52 panned concentrates range from 0.02 ppm to 2.70 ppm. In 6 biogeochemical samples the values were found to range between 0.03ppm and 0.06ppm Au. In Chandi Mandir, Berwala, Mandhana and Sabilpur area, of the 126 unpanned samples from loosely cemented bedrock from Upper Siwalik and compact Lower Siwalik, only 12 have analyzed >0.02 ppm Au, maximum being 0.05 ppm. In the terrace material adjoining the Siwaliks, of the 73 samples, 27 have analysed >0.02 ppm maximum being 0.14ppm. In one of the 6 unpanned streambed samples Au as high as 0.97ppm has been analyzed while in the remaining it is between 0.04 and 0.18ppm. Gold incidence has also been reported by GSI from rocks hosting sulphide mineralisation in Ajabgarh Group of rocks of Delhi Supergroup at Ghataser, Golwa, and Bakrija Mahendragarh District. At Ghataser, white quartz veins within quartzite analyzed 0.11ppm to 0.5 ppm gold. Incidences of gold have been reported from veins in the metasediments and granite of the northern block of Tosham Tin-Tungsten prospects. The gold values ranging from 0.01ppm to maximum of 2.86ppm have been reported from the Ore samples showing incidences of copper, bismuth and cobalt mineralisation.
Graphite : In Minerals of Haryana, graphite occurs in association with schists in Gurgaon District. A graphitic schist band occurs west of Sohna in which graphite occurs as flakes and amorphous carbon and show increasing concentration with depth. Near Raisina, the dark schist bands are richer in graphite. Other occurrences in Gurgaon District are at Baghaul and Haryahera in thin schist bands interbedded with quartzite. Graphite is used in the manufacture of “Brushes” in dynamos, as electrodes in electric furnaces and as moderator in atomic reactors. Gypsum Recent investigations by GSI confirmed the presence of bedded gypsum stretching for about 500 m along NW-SE occurring interbedded with sandsilt- clay sediments at Saharwa in Hissar District. The gypsum bands are of varying thickness upto maximum of 1.5m with Average CaSO4 content of 60%. Gypsite (low grade gypsum) with sand-silt and clay has been reported from Dariyapur and Garanpura-Kalan area of Bhiwani District. Gypsum is used as a retarder in cement, in Fertilizers, and as a filler in various materials like paper, crayons, paint, rubber and in manufacture of plaster of paris. Gypsum occurrences were also reported from the clay bands interbedded with sand Iayers from Julana area in Jind District and as lumps in the ferruginous clays of the Subathu Formation in Ambala District. Iron In Haryana, small deposits of high phosphorous iron ore are located in Mahendragarh District and another small occurrence is located in Bhiwani District.
Kankar : Kankar, a terrestrial accumulation of CaCO3 in the alluvial plains or aeolian sands and having a variable purity, is mostly confined to Bhiwani District and occurs as deposits in Mahendragarh, Sirsa, Hissar and Gurgaon Districts. The main occurrences in the District are Riwasa, Siwani, Kaland, Dadri, Achma, Lahori Jattu, Baliyali, Rupgarh, Mankawas and Kaunt. Kankar in the region occurs both as massive and fragmentary deposits and is mostly confined to palaeochannel courses and interdunal tracts in the area.
Limestone/ Dolomite : Limestone is a rock composed mainly of calcium carbonate. It is one of the most important industrial minerals required for the manufacture of lime and cement chemicals (soda-ash caustic soda, bleaching powder, calcium carbide etc.), fertilizer (ammonium nitrate) etc. and as a flux in iron and steel, ferro-alloy and other metallurgical industries. Limestone and dolomite in Haryana are mostly confined to Mahendragarh and Ambala Districts.,
Mineral Resources of Haryana
Haryana is a state in northern India. It is located in the Indo-Gangetic Plain and has a Population of over 25 million people. The state is known for its agriculture and manufacturing industries.
Haryana has a number of mineral resources, including limestone, gypsum, sand, gravel, and clay. These minerals are used in a variety of industries, including construction, manufacturing, and agriculture.
Limestone is the most important mineral resource in Haryana. It is used in the production of cement, lime, and other building materials. Gypsum is also an important mineral resource. It is used in the production of plasterboard, fertilizer, and other products.
Sand and gravel are used in the construction industry. Clay is used in the manufacturing of ceramics and other products.
The distribution of minerals in Haryana
The mineral resources of Haryana are distributed unevenly across the state. The most important mineral deposits are located in the southern part of the state.
The limestone deposits are located in the districts of Gurgaon, Faridabad, and Jhajjar. The gypsum deposits are located in the districts of Rewari, Mahendragarh, and Gurgaon. The sand and gravel deposits are located in the districts of Sonipat, Panipat, and Karnal. The clay deposits are located in the districts of Rohtak, Bhiwani, and Hisar.
The economic importance of minerals in Haryana
The mineral resources of Haryana are of great economic importance to the state. The mining industry employs a large number of people and contributes significantly to the state’s GDP.
The limestone industry is the most important mineral industry in Haryana. It employs over 100,000 people and contributes over Rs. 10,000 crore to the state’s GDP. The gypsum industry is also an important mineral industry. It employs over 50,000 people and contributes over Rs. 5,000 crore to the state’s GDP.
The sand and gravel industry is a growing industry in Haryana. It employs over 25,000 people and contributes over Rs. 2,500 crore to the state’s GDP. The clay industry is a small industry in Haryana. It employs over 10,000 people and contributes over Rs. 1,000 crore to the state’s GDP.
Conservation of minerals in Haryana
The mineral resources of Haryana are non-renewable resources. They need to be conserved for future generations.
The government of Haryana has taken a number of measures to conserve the mineral resources of the state. These measures include:
- Promoting the use of alternative materials
- Requiring mining companies to rehabilitate mined areas
- Imposing fines on mining companies that violate environmental regulations
Challenges in mining in Haryana
The mining industry in Haryana faces a number of challenges. These challenges include:
- The depletion of mineral resources
- The environmental impact of mining
- The social impact of mining
The depletion of mineral resources is a major challenge facing the mining industry in Haryana. The state’s mineral resources are being depleted at an alarming rate. This is due to the increasing demand for minerals from the construction, manufacturing, and agriculture industries.
The environmental impact of mining is another major challenge facing the mining industry in Haryana. Mining can cause Air Pollution, Water Pollution, and land degradation. It can also lead to the loss of Biodiversity-2/”>Biodiversity.
The social impact of mining is also a major challenge facing the mining industry in Haryana. Mining can displace people from their homes and land. It can also lead to social unrest and conflict.
Future of mining in Haryana
The future of mining in Haryana is uncertain. The state’s mineral resources are being depleted at an alarming rate. The environmental impact of mining is also a major concern. The government of Haryana needs to take steps to conserve the mineral resources of the state and to mitigate the environmental impact of mining.
Here are some frequently asked questions and short answers about minerals of Haryana for Haryana PSC:
- What are the Major Minerals found in Haryana?
The major minerals found in Haryana are limestone, dolomite, gypsum, quartzite, sandstone, and shale.
- What are the uses of limestone?
Limestone is used in the manufacture of cement, lime, and other building materials. It is also used in the steel industry and in the production of paper.
- What are the uses of dolomite?
Dolomite is used in the manufacture of cement, lime, and other building materials. It is also used in the steel industry and in the production of paper.
- What are the uses of gypsum?
Gypsum is used in the manufacture of plasterboard, drywall, and other building materials. It is also used in the production of fertilizer and in the oil and gas industry.
- What are the uses of quartzite?
Quartzite is used in the manufacture of abrasives, countertops, and other building materials. It is also used in the construction industry and in the production of glass.
- What are the uses of sandstone?
Sandstone is used in the manufacture of building materials, such as bricks and tiles. It is also used in the construction industry and in the production of glass.
- What are the uses of shale?
Shale is used in the manufacture of building materials, such as bricks and tiles. It is also used in the construction industry and in the production of glass.
- What are the challenges faced by the mining industry in Haryana?
The mining industry in Haryana faces a number of challenges, including:
- The depletion of mineral resources
- The environmental impact of mining
- The social impact of mining
The lack of Investment in the mining industry
What are the government’s initiatives to address the challenges faced by the mining industry in Haryana?
The government of Haryana has taken a number of initiatives to address the challenges faced by the mining industry, including:
- The development of a new mining policy
- The provision of financial assistance to the mining industry
- The promotion of research and development in the mining industry
The training of mine workers
What are the future prospects for the mining industry in Haryana?
The future prospects for the mining industry in Haryana are positive. The government’s initiatives to address the challenges faced by the mining industry are expected to lead to a revival of the industry. The development of new mining projects and the expansion of existing mining projects are expected to create new jobs and boost the economy of Haryana.
Which of the following is not a mineral found in Haryana?
(A) Bauxite
(B) Limestone
(C) Gypsum
(D) CoalThe largest producer of limestone in Haryana is:
(A) Gurgaon
(B) Faridabad
(C) Jhajjar
(D) SonipatThe largest producer of gypsum in Haryana is:
(A) Rewari
(B) Mahendragarh
(C) Bhiwani
(D) HisarThe largest producer of bauxite in Haryana is:
(A) Mewat
(B) Nuh
(C) Palwal
(D) FaridabadThe largest producer of coal in Haryana is:
(A) Yamunanagar
(B) Karnal
(C) Panipat
(D) KurukshetraThe main use of limestone is in the production of:
(A) Cement
(B) Steel
(C) Fertilizer
(D) GlassThe main use of gypsum is in the production of:
(A) Cement
(B) Plaster of Paris
(C) Fertilizer
(D) GlassThe main use of bauxite is in the production of:
(A) Aluminum
(B) Steel
(C) Fertilizer
(D) GlassThe main use of coal is in the production of:
(A) Electricity
(B) Steel
(C) Fertilizer
(D) GlassHaryana is a major producer of which of the following minerals?
(A) Bauxite
(B) Limestone
(C) Gypsum
(D) All of the above