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Explore the differences between mineral deposits and ores, world distribution of resources, formation processes, mining methods, and environmental concerns. Learn about surface and underground mining, mineral extraction techniques, and the impact on ecosystems.
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Mining Methods and Environmental Issues in Developing Nations
Mineral Deposits vs. Ores • A mineral deposit is a naturally-occurring concentration of a particular mineral - examples? • An ore is a mineral deposit that can be economically developed
Mineral Deposits vs. Ores • One judge of ore quality is the Concentration Factor • CF = Chost rock/Caverage crust • Other judges of ore quality include location, economic variables, political variables, extraction technology, and environmental variables.
World Distribution of Mineral Resources • Generally uneven - determined by geologic history and tectonic setting • High metal concentrations along active or extinct plate boundaries (American Cordillera) • A relatively small population in the industrialized countries now consume the vast majority of the world’s mineral resources, BUT the resources come from ALL nations.
Formation of Mineral Deposits • Igneous • gravitational settling of early, dense minerals on floor of magma chamber • e.g. Bushveld Intrusion, South Africa
Layers of chromite and platinum in the Bushveld Intrusion, South Africa
Formation of Mineral Deposits • Metamorphic • country rocks around an igneous intrusion are changed by heat and chemical reactions with hydrothermal fluids • contact aureole
Formation of Mineral Deposits • Hydrothermal • minerals precipitate from hydrothermal solutions above intrusions, leaving veins or disseminated deposits • Porphyry Copper Deposits, such as Bingham Canyon, Utah
Porphyry Copper Deposits Bingham Canyon Copper
Formation of Mineral Deposits • Sedimentary • Preferential settling of denser minerals from flowing water • Placer deposits: glacial deposit containing particles of valuable mineral • gold placer deposits of California • placer diamond deposits of South Africa
Gold Placer Deposits An overview of an example of a gold mining operation supplied by airplane.
Formation of Mineral Deposits • Weathering • removes soluble components of rock, leaving behind concentrated ore • Bauxite aluminum ore in the tropics
Formation of Mineral Deposits • Evaporation • leaves a precipitated salt layer • Middle-East Seas • desert lakes world-wide. Saltworks in San Francisco Bay
Formation of Mineral Deposits • Secondary enrichment • primary deposit is further concentrated by groundwater dissolution followed by re-precipitation • Copper deposits of Arizona.
Mining Methods • Surface Mining • Responsible for 2/3 of world annual mineral production • Open-pits, strip mines, quarries • Employs enormous equipment • Reclamation is expensive and sometimes fails Coal mine, Mpumalanga Province, South Africa
Mining Methods • Underground Mining • Cheaper reclamation, but overall more expensive • Less productive than surface mining • Generally more dangerous to miners • Potentially less wasteful than surface mining • Depth limited to about 4 km by high pressures
4-stage evolution of a Producing Mine • Exploration • Evaluation • Development • Production The first 3 may continue after production starts
Day to Day Activities at a Working Mine • Expose the ore • Transport and stockpile the ore
Day to Day Activities at a Working Mine • Dress the ore • Includes crushing and concentrating the ore before extracting the element of interest • Crushing is done in progressively fine stages
Day to Day Activities at a Working Mine • Concentration methods include • Flotation Separation • Gravity Separation using water or heavy liquids • Magnetic Separation
Day to Day Activities at a Working Mine • Extractive Metallurgy • Pyrometallurgy (smelting) • Melt concentrate in furnace • Separate metal from slag by distillation or immiscibility • Byproducts include gas, vaporized metals, and dust
Day to Day Activities at a Working Mine • Extractive Metallurgy • Hydrometallurgy • Dissolve or leach metal from ore or concentrate • Solvents include sulfuric acid, ammonium, mercury, and sodium cyanide solutions (NaCN dissolves gold) • High-grade ores are vat-leached; low-grade ores are heap-leached • Gold in sulfides is roasted first, creating SO2.
Day to Day Activities at a Working Mine • Extractive Metallurgy • Electrometallurgy • Electric current is used to deposit metal on cathodes • Often used to purify metal produced by pyrometallurgy
Environmental Issues • Waste Disposal • Amount of waste (tailings) depends on ore grade and extraction technology; can be >99 %. • Finely ground waste rock (tailings) may contain sulfides, heavy metals, and cyanide residue • Underground mines use waste as stope fill • Surface mines convert into slurry and pipe to tailings pond or dump in the ocean
Environmental Issues • Problems with Tailings Dams in Developing Countries • Leaks and failures are common • 1988 – China, dam overtopped • 700,000 m3 molybdenum waste released • 20 deaths • 2000 – China, gas explosion • 160 deaths
Environmental Issues • Improved engineering of tailings dams in developed countries • Drainage blankets to reduce internal pore pressures • Upstream construction to increase dam strength • Impermeable retention dams • Acid Mine Drainage • Sulfides, a common waste product, react when exposed to the atmosphere to form sulfuric acid