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Natural
Bentonite Clay
Origin, mineralogy and properties
Bentonite Formation - Millions of years ago, during the
Cretaceous period, the western United States experienced
extensive volcanic activity due to the tectonic convergence of
the North American and Pacific plates. During long periods of
eruptions, immeasurable amounts of ash were disgorged into the
prevailing easterly winds as the Pacific plate was forced under
the North American plate deep into the earths crust. Over
millions of years, the ash was repeatedly deposited in the
mineral rich Mowry sea and interbedded with eroded silts and
sediments. Slowly, the glass component of the ash was chemically
altered in these low energy marine environments and consolidated
into distinct layers of clay, often associated with Zeolite beds,
marl, sandstone as well as shale and mudstone.
As plate drift continued, the North American plate was lifted and
folded into mountains, typified by the Big Horn Mountains of
Wyoming. The Mowry sea drained and ash deposition subsided as the
clay / silt formations were heaved upwards. The Black Hills and
the Big Horn mountains were two areas thrust up during this
period. These areas were eroded and weathered over time, exposing
numerous clay beds that are commercially mined today.
Definition - The term "Bentonite" is generally
applied to the colloidal clays originally associated with the
Cretaceous Benton Shale outcrops near Fort Benton, Wyoming. In
the late 1880s, the "clay of a thousand uses "
was first called Taylorite, after William Taylor; one of the
first commercial producers of the product in the Rock River area.
Finding that name already taken, the clay was renamed for the
Benton formation in which the outcrop was found, i.e. Bentonite.
Mineralogy Bentonite is not itself a mineral name,
but more correctly, it is a smectite clay composed primarily of
the mineral Montmorillonite. Montmorillonite is a three layer
mineral formed of several layers of tetrahedron and octahedron
sheets, electrostatically held together by isomorphic interlayer
cations. As the electrostatic attraction is low, exposure to
polar fluids will cause the formation of a monomolecular lattice
of water between the silicate layers. The basis behind bentonite
swelling is that several layers of water dipoles can form into
weak "stacked" tetrahedral structures, causing the
silicate layers to separate - this is termed intercrystalline
swelling.
Particle Charge - Each crystal of Montmorillonite has a large net negative charge. Thus it tends to attract any positive ions (cations), such as Calcium or Sodium ions, to its surface. If the majority of these cations are Sodium, it is commonly referred to as a Sodium Bentonite (Montmorillonite). If the majority of the ions on the clay surface are Calcium, it is referred to as a Calcium Bentonite (Montmorillonite). The net negative charge is located inside the crystal itself. Therefore, cations tend to be attracted to the surface of the particle in an effort to neutralize the charge. The edge of the crystal has a few positive charges thus attracting negatively charged ions or molecules. **
Typical chemical analysis of Goldfish
Koi Pond Powder®:
| SiO2 silica | 56.0 - 59.0% | K2O potash | 0.64 - 0.75% | |
| Al2O3 alumina | 18.0 - 21.0% | Trace Elements | 2.8% | |
| FeO Fe2O3 iron oxide | 5.4 - 9.0% | Alkalinity PH | 6.0 - 10.0% | |
| MgO magnesia | 3.0 - 3.3% | |||
| CaO calcium | 1.2 - 3.5% | |||
| Na2O sodium | 0.3 - 0.5% | |||
| H2O (crystalline) | 5.5% |
Particle size: .0035 inches or 88 microns passing through a #200 screen.
65 different trace minerals have been identified in this essential substance.
The difference in chemical composition between the bentonite compound and the mineral montmorillonite is due to the extra elements and trace elements absorbed by the volcanic ash