gooch
Member
I posted this in my many questions thread but it is buried in there and I am not sure if people are looking who can specifically answer this. I found a current form of White playsand made by oldcastle/southdown and it is distributed to a store within my area. The customer service rep I spoke with was very helpful and provided me these PDF's about their product that I have pasted in here so you experts can help decipher whether or not this sand would be ok to use as a base substrate to add live sand on top of.
The first one is the mineral composition of the white playsand.
TECHNICAL DATA SHEET
WHITE PLAYSAND
SCREENED LIMESTONE
Product Codes
250302 50# Bags
420101 0.4 C.F.
820125 0.5 C.F.
CHEMICAL ANALYSIS – (Typical)
Magnesium Carbonate (MgCO3) 1.0%
Calcium Carbonate (CaCO3) 96.0%
PHYSICAL PROPERTIES – (Typical)
FINENESS
% Through No. 10 U.S. Standard Sieve 100%
% Through No. 20 U.S. Standard Sieve 56%
% Through No. 50 U.S. Standard Sieve 3%
% Through No. 100 U.S. Standard Sieve 1%
BULK DENSITY
SETTLED - # / FT3 95#/ft3
Specific Gravity 2.7
One thing I notice is that it is primarily limestone... which what I understood is all calcium (dead corals). So wouldnt this be the same as aragonite?
The first one is the mineral composition of the white playsand.
TECHNICAL DATA SHEET
WHITE PLAYSAND
SCREENED LIMESTONE
Product Codes
250302 50# Bags
420101 0.4 C.F.
820125 0.5 C.F.
CHEMICAL ANALYSIS – (Typical)
Magnesium Carbonate (MgCO3) 1.0%
Calcium Carbonate (CaCO3) 96.0%
PHYSICAL PROPERTIES – (Typical)
FINENESS
% Through No. 10 U.S. Standard Sieve 100%
% Through No. 20 U.S. Standard Sieve 56%
% Through No. 50 U.S. Standard Sieve 3%
% Through No. 100 U.S. Standard Sieve 1%
BULK DENSITY
SETTLED - # / FT3 95#/ft3
Specific Gravity 2.7
One thing I notice is that it is primarily limestone... which what I understood is all calcium (dead corals). So wouldnt this be the same as aragonite?