Phosphate-rock or more precisely the phosphorites form the repository of phosphate supply for the fertilizer industry for manufacture of elemental phosphorus, phospho- ric acid and innumerable alkali phosphates. It has been universally agreed that phosphorites have some kind of sedimentary marine origin, the source of phosphorous being of organic and/or inorganic origin(1). The principal phos-phate mineral occuring in these deposits is referred by its generic designation as collophane (2), a carbonate bearing variety apatite, whose formula is approximately Cato ( PO4 CO3.H20 with a little of F. It is porous and crypto-crystalline, occuring as compact nodules or pellets as disseminations in calcitic or qurtzitic ...