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Bog iron was also found on the [[Eastern Shore of Maryland]]. The remains of a commercial smelting operation near [[Snow Hill, Maryland]], are now a state and national historic site. Known as [[Furnace Town Living Heritage Museum|Furnace Town]], it was called the [[Nassawango Iron Furnace Site|Nassawango Iron Furnace]] after the nearby creek. The commercial furnace ran from about 1825 to 1850.
Bog iron was also found on the [[Eastern Shore of Maryland]]. The remains of a commercial smelting operation near [[Snow Hill, Maryland]], are now a state and national historic site. Known as [[Furnace Town Living Heritage Museum|Furnace Town]], it was called the [[Nassawango Iron Furnace Site|Nassawango Iron Furnace]] after the nearby creek. The commercial furnace ran from about 1825 to 1850.

The Shapleigh Iron Company constructed a smelter at North [[Shapleigh, Maine]], in 1836 to exploit a small bog iron deposit in Little Ossipee Pond. The plant commenced operation in 1837, but according to an 1854 history of Shapleigh "the business [proved] unprofitable [and] after a few years was abandoned." By 1854 some facilities of the former iron works had been converted to other manufacturing uses.<ref>Loring, Rev. Amasa. ''A History of Shapleigh'', Portland, ME: Brown and Thurston, 1854.</ref> Foundations, walls, and slag remained at the site at the time of a 2003 Maine Geological Survey publication on the site.<ref>Weddle, Thomas K. The Iron Age of Maine, Part II: The Shapleigh Iron Company: A Foray into Industrial (geo)Archaeology in ''Maine Geologic Facts and Localities''. Augusta, Maine: Maine Geological Survey, November, 2003. https://digitalmaine.com/mgs_publications/370/, accessed 6/9/2019.</ref>


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 16:00, 9 June 2019

Bog ore

Bog iron is a form of impure iron deposit that develops in bogs or swamps by the chemical or biochemical oxidation of iron carried in solution. In general, bog ores consist primarily of iron oxyhydroxides, commonly goethite (FeO(OH)).

Iron-bearing groundwater typically emerges as a spring. The iron is oxidized to ferric hydroxide upon encountering the oxidizing environment of the surface. Bog ore often combines goethite, magnetite, and vugs or stained quartz. Oxidation may occur through enzyme catalysis by iron bacteria. It is not clear whether the magnetite precipitates upon first contact with oxygen, then oxidizes to ferric compounds, or whether the ferric compounds are reduced when exposed to anoxic conditions upon burial beneath the sediment surface and reoxidized upon exhumation at the surface.[citation needed]

Bog iron, like other hydrous iron oxides, has a specific affinity for heavy metals.[1] This affinity combined with the porous structure and high specific surface area of bog iron make it a good natural sorbent.[2] These properties combined with the fact that bog iron is cheap to obtain are incentives for its utilization in environmental protection technologies.[2]

Part of Wall with Hermai—usage of bog ore in architecture

Iron made from bog ore will often contain residual silicates, which can form a glassy coating that imparts some resistance to rusting.

Typical iron-bearing ground water emerging as a spring. The iron is oxidized to ferric hydroxide upon encountering the oxidizing environment of the surface. A large number of these springs and seeps on the flood plain provide the iron for bog iron deposits.

Formation

Iron is carried to bogs in low-pH, low dissolved oxygen iron-bearing groundwater that reaches the surface through springs, along structures of fractures, or where ground water intersects surface flows.[3] The iron in the water is then oxidized by dissolved oxygen or, through enzyme catalysis by iron bacteria (e.g. Thiobacillus ferrooxidans and Th. thiooxidans) that concentrate the iron as part of their life processes.[4] Presence of these bacteria can be detected by the oily film they leave on the surface of the water.[3] This change of oxidation state causes the precipitation of fine-grained iron solids near the point of groundwater discharge.[3] A variety of iron minerals, such as geothite, magnetite, hematite, schwertmannite, and amorphous iron-aluminum-sulfate-rich solids, can be formed via oxidation of ferrous iron under the acidic conditions present.[4] All photosynthesizers play dual roles as oxygen producers, and thus passive iron oxidizers, and as surfaces to which the iron can sorb or bind.[4] This causes aquatic plants to become heavily encrusted with a light-orange floc of iron oxyhydroxide near the point of oxygen gas release from the plants.[4] Factors such as local geology, parent rock mineralogy, ground-water composition, and geochemically active microbes & plants influence the formation, growth, and persistence of iron bogs.[4] Bog iron is a renewable resource, the same bog can be harvested about once each generation.[3]

Iron extraction

Iron smelting from bog iron was invented during the Pre-Roman Iron Age, and most Viking era iron was smelted from bog iron.[3] Limited technology is needed to process bog iron since it does not have to be molten to remove many impurities.[5] Due to its easy accessibility and reducibility, bog iron was commonly used for early iron production.[6] Early metallurgists identified bog iron deposits by: withered grass, a wet environment, hygrophilous grass-dominated vegetation, and reddish-brown solutions or depositions in nearby waters.[7] Wooden or metal sticks were then stabbed into the ground to detect larger ore deposits.[7] Layers of peat in the bog were cut and pulled back using turf knives to extract smaller, pea sized nodules of bog iron.[3] Early iron production from bog ore was mostly done in bloomery furnaces.[7] The resources necessary for production were wood for charcoal, clay for the construction of bloomery furnaces, and water for processing.[7] Iron in the ore is reduced to a spongy iron bloom that stays in the upper part of the furnace while the undesirable elements stream downwards as slag.[8] Smelting with a bloomery furnace often results in between 10 and 20 mass percent Fe being reduced to iron bloom, while the rest is transferred into the slag.[9] The bloom must then be consolidated with a hammer to make usable wrought iron. There is some archaeological evidence that lime was added to furnaces to treat silica-rich ores that were difficult to smelt by the bloomery process.[3]

Europe

First iron smelting attempts date back to the 2nd millennium BCE in the Near East.[7] The technology then spread throughout Europe in the following two millennia, reaching Poland in the 2nd century BCE.[7] Iron production reached Scandinavia through Denmark in 500 CE and spread to Norway and Sweden shortly thereafter.[5] There is evidence of a direct relationship between Viking settlements in Northern Europe & North America and bog iron deposits.[5] Bog iron dominated the iron production of Norse populated areas including Scandinavia and Finland from 500 to 1300 CE.[5] Large scale production of bog iron was also established in Iceland at sites known as "Iron Farms".[5] Smaller scale production sites in Iceland consisted of large farmsteads and some original Icelandic settlements, but these seemed to only produce enough iron to be self-sufficient.[5] Even after improved smelting technology made mined ores viable during the Middle Ages, bog ore remained important, particularly to peasant iron production, into modern times.[10] In Russia, bog ore was the principal source of iron until the 16th century, when the superior ores of the Ural Mountains became available. [citation needed]

North America

Pre-Columbian

Iron may have been produced by Vikings at Point Rosee and other locations in Newfoundland around 1000 CE.[11][12] Excavations at L'Anse aux Meadows have found considerable evidence for the processing of bog iron and the production of iron ore.[5] The settlement at L'Anse aux Meadows was situated immediately east of a sedge peat bog and 15 kg of slag was found at the site, which would have produced around 3 kg of usable iron.[5] Analysis of the slag showed that considerably more iron could have been smelted out of the ore, indicating that the workers processing the ore had not been skilled.[5] This supports the idea that iron processing knowledge was widespread and not restricted to major centres of trade and commerce.[5] 98 nail fragments were also found at the site as well as considerable evidence for wood working which points to the iron produced at the site possibly being used only for ship repair and not tool making.[5][13]

Colonial North America

Bog iron was widely sought in colonial North America. The earliest known iron mines in North America are the mines from St. John's, Newfoundland, reported to be in operation by Anthony Parkhurst in 1578.[14] The first mining efforts in Virginia occurred as early as 1608. In 1619 Falling Creek Ironworks was established in Chesterfield County, Virginia. It was the location of the first blast furnace facility in North America.[15][16]

Lake Massapoag in Massachusetts was drawn down by deepening the outlet channel in a search for bog iron.[17] The Saugus Iron Works National Historic Site, on the Saugus River in Saugus, Massachusetts, operated between 1646 and 1668. The site contains a museum and several reconstructed buildings.[18] The success of the Saugus Iron Works, and the rapid depletion of the region's natural bog iron, led the owners to send prospectors into the surrounding countryside. In 1658 the company bought 1,600 acres (6.5 km2) of land which covered areas that are now Concord, Acton, and Sudbury. They set up a large production facility in Concord, Massachusetts, along the Assabet River with dams, ponds, watercourses, and hearths, but by 1694 the natural bog iron there had also been exhausted, and the land was sold for farming.[19]

In Central and Southern New Jersey, bog ore was mined and refined for the production of naturally rust-resistant tools and wrought iron rails, many of which still grace staircases in Trenton and Camden.[20] During the American Revolution, bog iron cannonballs were cast for the colonial forces.

Bog iron was also found on the Eastern Shore of Maryland. The remains of a commercial smelting operation near Snow Hill, Maryland, are now a state and national historic site. Known as Furnace Town, it was called the Nassawango Iron Furnace after the nearby creek. The commercial furnace ran from about 1825 to 1850.

The Shapleigh Iron Company constructed a smelter at North Shapleigh, Maine, in 1836 to exploit a small bog iron deposit in Little Ossipee Pond. The plant commenced operation in 1837, but according to an 1854 history of Shapleigh "the business [proved] unprofitable [and] after a few years was abandoned." By 1854 some facilities of the former iron works had been converted to other manufacturing uses.[21] Foundations, walls, and slag remained at the site at the time of a 2003 Maine Geological Survey publication on the site.[22]

See also

References

  1. ^ Kaczorek, Danuta, Gerhard W. Brümmer, and Michael Sommer (2009). "Content and Binding Forms of Heavy Metals, Aluminium and Phosphorus in Bog Iron Ores from Poland". Journal of Environmental Quality. 38 (3): 1109–1119. doi:10.2134/jeq2008.0125. PMID 19398508 – via Alliance of Crop, Soil, and Environmental Science Societies Digital Library.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ a b Rzepa, Grzegorz, Tomasz Bajda, and Tadeusz Ratajczak (2009). "Utilization of bog iron ores as sorbents of heavy metals". Journal of Hazardous Materials. 162 (2–3): 1007–1013. doi:10.1016/j.jhazmat.2008.05.135. PMID 18614286 – via ScienceDirect.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Heimann, R. B., U. Kreher, I. Spazier, and G. Wetzel (2002). "Mineralogical And Chemical Investigations Of Bloomery Slags From Prehistoric (8th Century Bc To 4th Century Ad) Iron Production Sites In Upper And Lower Lusatia, Germany". Archaeometry. 43(2): 227–252.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ a b c d e Stanton, M. R., D. B. Yager, D. L. Fey, and W. G. Wright (2007). "Formation and Geochemical Significance of Iron Bog Deposits - Chapter 14 - Formation and Geochemical Significance of Iron Bog Deposits" (PDF). U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper: 1096.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Bowles, G., R. Bowker, and N. Samsonoff (2011). "Viking expansion and the search for bog iron". Platforum. 12: 25–37.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  6. ^ Sitschick, H., F. Ludwig, E. Wetzel, J. Luckert, T. Höding (2005). "Raseneisenerz – auch in Brandenburg ein mineralischer Rohstoff mit bedeutender wirtschaftlicher Vergangenheit" (PDF). Brandenburgische Geowissenschaftliche Beiträge. 12: 119–128.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  7. ^ a b c d e f Thelemann, M., W. Bebermeier, P. Hoelzmann, and E. Lehnhardt (2017). "Bog iron ore as a resource for prehistoric iron production in Central Europe — A case study of the Widawa catchment area in eastern Silesia, Poland". Catena. 149(1): 474–490 – via Science Direct.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  8. ^ Koschke, Wolfgang (2002). "Raseneisenerz und Eisenhüttenindustrie in der nördlichen Oberlausitz". Freundeskreis Stadt- und Parkmuseum Bad Muskau e.V.
  9. ^ Sperling, Dieter (2003). Rohstoffgewinnung und Altbergbau im Förderraum Calau. Förderverein Kulturlandschaft Niederlausitz. ISBN 9783980803526.
  10. ^ Maria Sjöberg and Anton Tomilov, “Iron-Making in Peasant Communities,” in Iron-making Societies: Early Industrial Development in Sweden and Russia, 1600–1900, ed. Maria Ågren, 33–60 (New York: Berghahn, 1998), 33–36, 59–60; Anders Florén, Göran Rydén, Ludmila Dashkevich, D. V. Gavrilov and Sergei Ustiantsev, “'The Social Organisation of Work at Mines, Furnaces and Forges,” in Iron-making Societies: Early Industrial Development in Sweden and Russia, 1600–1900, ed. Maria Ågren, 61–138 (New York: Berghahn, 1998), 62–65.
  11. ^ Strauss, Mark (31 March 2016). "Discovery Could Rewrite History of Vikings in New World". National Geographic. National Geographic Partners, LLC. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
  12. ^ Kaplan, Sarah (2 April 2016). "An ancient site spotted from space could rewrite the history of Vikings in North America". SentinelSource.com. SentinelSource.com, Keene, NH. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
  13. ^ Lewis-Simpson, Shannon (2000). Vinland Revisited: The Norse World at the Turn of the First Millennium. St. John's, Newfoundland: St. John's, Newfoundland: Historic Sites Association of Newfoundland and Labrador, Inc. ISBN 0-919735-07-X.
  14. ^ "LETTER FROM ANTHONY PARKHURST TO RICHARD HAKLUYT, Lawyer, 1578" (PDF).
  15. ^ Hatch, Charles E., Jr.; Gregory, Thurlow Gates (July 1962). "The First American Blast Furnace, 1619-1622: The Birth of a Mighty Industry on Falling Creek in Virginia". The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 70 (3). Virginia Historical Society: 259–296. JSTOR 4246864.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  16. ^ Geist, Christopher. "The Works at Falling Creek". Colonial Williamsburg. The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
  17. ^ Diana Muir, Reflections in Bullough's Pond, University Press of New England, 2000.
  18. ^ "Saugus Iron Works". National Park Service. National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
  19. ^ Wheeler, Marian H. "The Concord Iron Works". Archived from the original on 2010-10-22. Retrieved 8 March 2018. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help) The Concord Iron Works
  20. ^ Barry Brady. "Early Settlers Made Iron Here" (PDF). New Jersey Pinelands Commission. Retrieved 24 Apr 2018.
  21. ^ Loring, Rev. Amasa. A History of Shapleigh, Portland, ME: Brown and Thurston, 1854.
  22. ^ Weddle, Thomas K. The Iron Age of Maine, Part II: The Shapleigh Iron Company: A Foray into Industrial (geo)Archaeology in Maine Geologic Facts and Localities. Augusta, Maine: Maine Geological Survey, November, 2003. https://digitalmaine.com/mgs_publications/370/, accessed 6/9/2019.