Building applications Caliche is used in construction worldwide. Its reserves in the
Llano Estacado in
Texas can be used in the manufacture of
Portland cement; the caliche meets the chemical composition requirements and has been used as a principal raw material in Portland cement production. surrounding a
stock tank in
Central Texas The Great House at
Casa Grande Ruins National Monument,
Arizona, US, was built with walls of caliche. Caliche was also used in mortars used in of the
Mayan buildings in the
Yucatán Peninsula in
Mexico. A dormitory in
Ingram, Texas, and a demonstration building in
Carrizo Springs, Texas, for the
United States Department of Energy were also built using caliche as part of studies by the Center for Maximum Potential Building Systems. In many areas, caliche is also used for road construction, either as a surfacing material, or more commonly, as base material. It is one of the most common road materials used in
Southern Africa. Caliche is widely used as a base material when it is locally available and cheap. However, it does not hold up to moisture (rain), and is never used if a hard-rock base material, such as limestone, is available.
Sugar refining A nearly pure source of calcium carbonate It must contain at least 95% calcium carbonate (CaCO3) and have a low magnesium content. In addition, the material must meet certain physical requirements so it does not break down when burned. Although caliche does not generally meet all of the requirements for sugar refining, it is used in areas where another source of calcium carbonate, such as limestone, is not present. While caliche requires
beneficiation to meet the requirements, its use can still be significantly cheaper than shipping in limestone.
Chilean caliche In the
Atacama Desert in northern
Chile, vast deposits of a mixture, also referred to as
caliche, are composed of
gypsum,
sodium chloride and other salts, and sand, associated to
salitre ("Chile saltpeter").
Salitre, in turn, is a composite of
sodium nitrate (NaNO3) and
potassium nitrate (KNO3).
Salitre was an important source of export revenue for Chile until World War I, when Europe began to produce both nitrates
industrially in large quantities. The deposits contain an average of 7.5% sodium nitrate, as well as sodium sulfate (18.87%), sodium chloride (4.8%), and smaller amounts of potassium, calcium, magnesium,
borate, iodine, and
perchlorate. About two-thirds of the deposits are insoluble
gangue minerals. The caliche beds are from 2 cm to several meters thick in alluvial deposits, where the soluble minerals form a cement in unconsolidated
regolith. Nitrate-bearing caliche is also found impregnating bedrock to form bedrock deposits.
SQM is Chile's main iodine producer. Iodine at SQM is extracted from caliche ore but requires also
sulphur,
ammonium nitrate,
sulfuric acid, kerosene, water, electricity and fossil fuel, mainly diesel. ==Caliche and agriculture==