Mud
Well-known member
Ok your tools may be good but where does your iron ore come from? Serious question and I'm not taking the mickey.
Are you mixing that low grade ore with Austrlian high grade?
What's the situation like over in Australia now that the mines are cutting so far back?
I know the popular speculative stories and a bit deeper, but I'd like to hear a local tell it.
Last I checked, all my tools are made of steel.
All the steel mines are in China.
There's iron ore all over south Jersey...
Even some in my yard.
I have no idea if it's ever still mined or not. There used to be a mess of charcoal furnaces 2 hundred years ago, but most of them died out when coal furnaces started popping up in PA.
You still see old wood stoves and things like that around marked with places like Batso, mined and cast in NJ.
Most of it is mined in Northern Minnesota. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iron_Range
Just in case your news filters the facts before serving, China has cut back on their use of your iron ore to practically nil, maybe forever.
I hear that some towns are offering $1,000,000 homes for $40,000 with no takers and that rentals are down from $1200 a week to no one there to rent them at all, at any price.
When that happened decades ago to oil, you could buy custom pick ups and outrageous work truck for for 90% off.
Are you deals on Harleys and toys over there yet?
There was a point where Minnesota supplied 90% of the world's iron. Now that was like the early 1900's, but hey, still cool!
Sounds as if you don't know what steel actually is.Last I checked, all my tools are made of steel.
Well around here the mining and shipping of iron ore (Taconite, processed ore) Is on the up climb.
While not as strong in employment numbers in the 50's through the 70's the tonnage is climbing due to more efficient work practices.
http://www.northlandsnewscenter.com/home/iron-ore-shipping-numbers-280537002.html
The ChiComs are one of the biggest buyers.
The simple answer about where your iron ore comes from? 93% of the usable iron ore for products in the US cam from mines in Michigan and Minnesota in 2014.
All the details one might want, and probably more, here:
http://minerals.usgs.gov/minerals/pubs/commodity/iron_ore/mcs-2015-feore.pdf
That's 93% of the United States' domestic ore production. Worldwide is a different story, you have to look at the second page of that USGS report. China and Australia are the two largest producers worldwide.The simple answer about where your iron ore comes from? 93% of the usable iron ore for products in the US cam from mines in Michigan and Minnesota in 2014.
That's 93% of the United States' domestic ore production. Worldwide is a different story, you have to look at the second page of that USGS report. China and Australia are the two largest producers worldwide.