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U.S. Geological Survey
Data Series 140

Supersedes Open-File Report 01-006

Historical Statistics for Mineral and Material Commodities in the United States

By Thomas D. Kelly and Grecia R. Matos, with major contributions provided by David A. Buckingham, Carl A. DiFrancesco, Kenneth E. Porter, and USGS mineral commodity specialists.1

2013 version
Online Only

General Notes Methodology Commodity Data and Notes Reference

    The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) provides information to the public and to policy-makers concerning the current use and flow of minerals and materials in the United States economy. The USGS collects, analyzes, and disseminates minerals information on most nonfuel mineral commodities.

This USGS digital database is an online compilation of historical U.S. statistics on mineral and material commodities. The database contains information on approximately 90 mineral commodities, including production, imports, exports, and stocks; reported and apparent consumption; and unit value (the real and nominal price in U.S. dollars of a metric ton of apparent consumption). For many of the commodities, data are reported as far back as 1900. Each commodity file includes a document that describes the units of measure, defines terms, and lists USGS contacts for additional information.

End-use tables complement these statistics by supplying, for most of these commodities, information about the distribution of apparent consumption.

This publication draws on more than 125 years of minerals information experience. At the request of the 47th Congress of the United States (1882; 22 Stat. 329), the U.S. Government began the collection and public distribution of these types of data. The Federal agencies responsible for the collection of the data have changed through time. For the years 1882-1924, the USGS collected and published these data; the U.S. Bureau of Mines (USBM) performed these tasks from 1925-95; and in 1996, the responsibilities once again passed to the USGS (following the closure of the USBM) (Mlynarski, 1998).

The USGS collects data on a monthly, quarterly, semiannual, and annual basis from more than 18,000 minerals-related producer and consumer establishments that cooperate with the USGS. These companies voluntarily complete about 40,000 canvass forms that survey production, consumption, recycling, stocks, shipments, and other essential information. Data are also gathered from site visits, memberships on domestic and international minerals-related committees, and coordination with other government organizations and trade associations.

The USGS makes this information available through published products, including monthly, quarterly, and annual Mineral Industry Surveys, the annual Minerals Yearbook (MYB), the annual Mineral Commodity Summaries (MCS), and special mineral commodity studies, including the history of metal prices and materials flow studies.

Methodology

The data included in this publication were compiled primarily from publications of the USGS and USBM. The principal references for these data are the annual MYB publication and its predecessor, Mineral Resources of the United States (MR). Other USGS and USBM publications used as references included: Statistical Compendium (SC), Metal Prices in the United States Through 1991 (MP91), Metal Prices in the United States Through 1998 (MP98), MCS and its predecessor Commodity Data Summaries (CDS), Minerals Facts and Problems (MFP), and various USBM Information Circulars. In some cases, USGS mineral commodity specialists added previously unpublished or recently revised data to the historical statistics series.

The data in these worksheets are standardized to metric tons (t) and dollars per metric ton ($/t) to allow for data comparison among mineral commodities through time. During the 20th century, different units of measure were used: units varied between commodities and even within a commodity through time. Cement, for example, was originally reported in barrels, the industry standard for much of last century, from 1972 to 1990 in short tons, and was switched to metric tons in 1991. From the mid-1980s to the early 1990s, most commodities switched to metric units. However, some commodities are still reported in units that represent the physical state of the commodity (million cubic meters for helium, a gas) or an industry market unit (carats for diamonds).

Data are reproduced as they were published (after the necessary conversions) for production, shipments, imports, exports, reported and apparent consumption, stocks, and end uses. Blank cells in the tables indicate that data were not available or were withheld because the data were proprietary; blank cells are not zero. The worksheet notes accompanying each table indicate whether data were withheld or not available.

Apparent consumption is a calculated figure. The general formula for apparent consumption is as follows:

Apparent Consumption = Production + Imports - Exports ± (Stock Change).

However, in some instances, reported consumption (from industry sources) was directly recorded in MYB or MCS. If both apparent consumption and reported consumption are available, both are reproduced in these reports. When apparent consumption could not be calculated because of withheld data or unavailable data, it was estimated using Microsoft® Excel2.

End use for this application has been defined as the use of the mineral or material commodity in a particular industrial sector (for example, construction, containers and packaging, electronics, and transportation) or product (for example, automobiles, batteries, flame retardants, and soaps and detergents).

For most commodities, end-use data are industry reported and are published in the MYB. For several commodities, the end-use data are not available or are of limited reliability. In such cases, data are usually calculated by applying estimated end-use shares (percentages) by category, as reported in the Mineral Commodity Summaries, to apparent consumption. Otherwise, USGS mineral commodity specialists estimated end-use statistics using a variety of sources of information. Finally, for a limited number of commodities, no end-use data are available.

Unit value is a measure of the price of a physical unit of apparent consumption (in this case, a metric ton) in dollars. For a commodity whose apparent consumption is measured in a single physical form, such as copper metal, a simple price series may be used to estimate the unit value. For many commodities, apparent consumption measures more than one form of the commodity. The commodity chromium, for example, includes chromium metal, chromium ferroalloys, and chromite ore in its measurement of apparent consumption. Weighted averages were used in these cases, where the price of each form of chromium was weighted by the amount that each form contributes to apparent consumption. For many commodities, a price series was not available, but total value of exports, imports, and production was reported. Unit values were derived, in these cases, using the physical quantity data for exports, imports, and production. The notes that accompany each mineral commodity worksheet discuss the source of apparent consumption and unit value data and the assumptions made in estimating these data when they were not available from the references. Unit values in these tables are also reported in 1998 (constant) dollars, where the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers was used as the deflator. Constant dollars remove the effect of inflation on the unit value.

The data sources and methods for each mineral commodity are documented in a Microsoft® Word file that is embedded in each Microsoft® Excel workbook. By clicking on the Microsoft® Word icon located in the spreadsheet, the notes for the commodity will be shown. The notes, where appropriate, also provide a brief explanation of shifts or trends in the use of the commodity, anomalies in the data, or additional, relevant information. Finally, the notes also provide contact details for relevant USGS specialists.

In the end-use tables, each workbook contains three worksheets, accessed through the tabs that are located on the bottom left corner of the spreadsheet. These worksheets are labeled “end-use statistics,” “end-use graph,” and “end-use notes.” When the workbook is first opened, the “end-use statistics” tab is viewed, showing the detailed yearly end-use statistics for the commodity. By clicking on the “end-use graph” tab, a graphic displaying the statistics is shown. Clicking on the “end-use notes” tab displays the same worksheet notes embedded as a Microsoft® Word file.

Click on the following list of mineral commodities to view the data.

Nonfuel mineral commodities - alphabetical index

| A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z

Commodity Supply-Demand Statistics End-Use Statistics
Format
Data coverage through
Format
Data coverage through
Abrasives (manufactured) PDF XLSX 2011 NA
Abrasives (natural) PDF XLSX 2011 NA
Aluminum PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Agriculture and Fishery PDF XLSX 2011 NA
Antimony PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Arsenic PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Asbestos PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Barite PDF XLSX 2011 NA
Bauxite and alumina PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Beryllium PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Bismuth PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Boron PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Bromine PDF XLSX 2011 NA
Cadmium PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Cement PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Cesium PDF XLSX 2011 NA
Chromium PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Clays PDF XLSX 2011  
    Ball clay     included with Clays above PDF XLS 2003
    Bentonite     included with Clays above PDF XLS 2003
    Fire clay     included with Clays above PDF XLS 2003
    Fuller's earth     included with Clays above PDF XLS 2003
    Kaolin     included with Clays above PDF XLS 2003
    Miscellaneous clay and shale     included with Clays above PDF XLS 2003
Coal combustion products PDF XLSX 2011 NA
Cobalt PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Copper PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Diamond (industrial) PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Diatomite PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Feldspar PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Fluorspar PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Gallium PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Garnet (industrial) PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Gemstones PDF XLSX 2011 NA
Germanium PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Gold PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Graphite (natural) PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Gypsum PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Hafnium PDF XLSX 2011 NA
Helium PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Indium PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Iodine PDF XLSX 2011 NA
Iron and steel PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Iron and steel scrap PDF XLSX 2011 NA
Iron and steel slag PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Iron ore PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Iron oxide pigments PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Kyanite PDF XLSX 2011 NA
Lead PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Lime PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Lithium PDF XLSX 2011 NA
Magnesium compounds PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Magnesium metal PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Manganese PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Mercury PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Mica (scrap and flake) PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Mica (sheet) PDF XLS 2009 NA
Molybdenum PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Nickel PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Niobium (Columbium) PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Nitrogen PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Organics (nonrenewable) PDF XLSX 2011 NA
Peat PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Perlite PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Phosphate rock PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Platinum-group metals PDF XLSX 2011 NA
Potash PDF XLSX 2011 NA
Pumice and pumicite PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Quartz crystal (industrial) PDF XLSX 2011 NA
Rare earths PDF XLSX 2011 NA
Rhenium PDF XLSX 2011 NA
Salt PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Sand and gravel (construction) PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Sand and gravel (industrial) PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Selenium PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Silicon PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Silver PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Soda ash (sodium carbonate) PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Sodium sulfate PDF XLSX 2011 NA
Stone (crushed) PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Stone (dimension) PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Strontium PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Sulfur PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Talc and pyrophyllite PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Tantalum PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Tellurium PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Thallium PDF XLSX 2011 NA
Thorium PDF XLSX 2011 NA
Tin PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Titanium dioxide pigment PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2004
Titanium metal PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2004
Titanium mineral concentrates PDF XLSX 2011 NA
Tungsten PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Vanadium PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Vermiculite PDF XLSX 2011 NA
Wollastonite PDF XLSX 2011 NA
Wood PDF XLSX 2011 NA
Zinc PDF XLSX 2011 PDF XLS 2003
Zirconium mineral concentrates PDF XLSX 2011 NA

Footnotes

NA Not Available
1 Also contributing to this series were Cyrus Berry, Melissa Crane, Thomas Goonan, and John Sznopek.
2Any use of trade, product, or firm names in this publication is for descriptive purposes only and does not imply endorsement by the U.S. Government.

Reference Cited

Mlynarski, K.W., 1998, Survey methods for nonfuel minerals:  U.S. Geological Survey Minerals Yearbook 1998, v.1, p. 1.1-1.4.


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