“…In this report, as in the report on resources in Permian rocks in southwest Montana (Swanson, 1970), the term "phosphate" (a phosphorus compound) is used in a chemical sense for both the raw material and the products made from it (not including elemental phosphorus) ; the term "phosphate rock" is used in an industrial sense for the material mined and treated, or potential thereto; the term "phosphorite," a lithologic term, is used in a descriptive sense for a rock containing more phosphate mineral than any other rock component; and the term "phosphatic" is used for a rock in which the phosphate mineral represents more than 20 percent of the total (7.8 percent P2O5) but is not the dominant component. The phosphate rock may be almost entirely phosphorite, as in some of the high-grade deposits of this region, or it may be a mixture of rock types, dominantly phosphorite but including mudstone, sandstone, carbonate rock, or chert, generally interbedded with the phosphorite.…”