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The Ultra-Pure, Super-Secret Sand That Makes Your Phone Possible (wired.com)

The processor that makes your laptop or cell phone work was fabricated using quartz from this obscure Appalachian backwater. From a report: Alex Glover is a recently retired geologist who has spent decades hunting for valuable minerals in the hillsides and hollows of the Appalachian Mountains that surround Spruce Pine, North Carolina. Spruce Pine is not a wealthy place. Its downtown consists of a somnambulant train station across the street from a couple of blocks of two-story brick buildings, including a long-closed movie theater and several empty storefronts. The wooded mountains surrounding it, though, are rich in all kinds of desirable rocks, some valued for their industrial uses, some for their pure prettiness. But it's the mineral in Glover's bag -- snowy white grains, soft as powdered sugar -- that is by far the most important these days. It's quartz, but not just any quartz. Spruce Pine, it turns out, is the source of the purest natural quartz -- a species of pristine sand -- ever found on Earth.

This ultra-elite deposit of silicon dioxide particles plays a key role in manufacturing the silicon used to make computer chips. In fact, there's an excellent chance the chip that makes your laptop or cell phone work was made using sand from this obscure Appalachian backwater. "It's a billion-dollar industry here," Glover says with a hooting laugh. "Can't tell by driving through here. You'd never know it." In the 21st century, sand has become more important than ever, and in more ways than ever. Most of the world's sand grains are composed of quartz, which is a form of silicon dioxide, also known as silica. High-purity silicon dioxide particles are the essential raw materials from which we make computer chips, fiber-optic cables, and other high-tech hardware -- the physical components on which the virtual world runs.

2 of 160 comments (clear)

  1. Re:"backwater" places by pgmrdlm · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If the back waters were to stop shipping all resources they have to big cities. Lets see. That would be food, water, any and all minerals, timber, and anything else that big cities need but will never get without the backwaters. I bet the elites would show more respect.

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    Anonymous comments are as pathetic as the anonymous "sources" that contaminate gutless journalism from the New York Time
  2. Why isn't the wealth coming back to the community? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Ignore all those thin-skinned culture warriors whining about word choice, its standard authoritarian distraction designed to keep regular folks from talking about important stuff.

    The real issue here is why the people in this place aren't benefiting from the mining? It sounds like the same old "resource curse" that screws over poor people the world over - a couple of very wealthy people come and take without giving back proportionality. Sure, they give a little, baubles basically, to keep everyone distracted but once the resources are gone, everything ends up collapsing even worse than before.

    Its not about who said mean words, its about all that wealth being taken by those who have more than enough wealth already.