Topic5 MiningMethods PartI Surfacemining
Topic5 MiningMethods PartI Surfacemining
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Hassan Z. Harraz
Tanta University
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Hassan Z. Harraz
[email protected]
2010- 2011
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The concepts indicated in these slides are considered common
knowledge to those familiar with the field. Many of these ideas have
been published in a variety of different texts and papers over time – no
one of which was specifically used as an outline for this work.
Geology
Mining conditions
Economic analysis
Geography:
Topography, a function of location, affects cost of development and operation of a surface mine. Geographic location establishes
climate.
Location establishes the condition of remoteness from or proximity to civilization and its developed facilities such as transportation
systems, power supply, labour pool, manufacturing and supply services, and specialty repair shops.
Land and other necessary rights should be checked, such as water use rights and the ability to acquire auxiliary land for plant site, roads,
tailings disposal ground etc.
It is important to determine the extent and nature of national and local laws and regulations in regard to conservation, water use, water
and air pollution, tailings disposal, reclaimation, handling of explosives, taxes, royalities, import duties, mining safety and health codes,
wage and labour conditions, pension requirements, and unions.
Evaluation of Surface Deposits (cont.)
Geology
Geological evaluation may include wide-spaced drilling, drill-sample logging, testing and processing, plotting of the data on
maps and cross-sections, preparation of specialized interpretive maps, calculation of reserves by grades, calculation of
stripping requirements, groundwater studies, and economic analysis.
Mining conditions
The geometry of an ore body and the topography of the land surface beneath which the ore body exists will affect the kind
and cost of a surface mine. The depth and character of overlying rock and the physical characteristics of the wall rock also
affect the configuration and cost of a surface mine.
Almost every potential surface mine must consider some phase of product upgrading (benefication).
This may vary from a simple crushing and sizing operation to a complex operation including multiple stages of size
reduction, concentration and agglomeration. In many cases, pilot-scale testing is deemed advisable.
Economic analysis
In the broadest sense, economic analysis for a surface mine involves the determination of market value of the product and
all the elements of cost of production.
Many new surface mines require very high capital investments. There are 3 commonly used yardsticks to value investment
worth :
i) Degree of necessity,
At one mine, it may be desirable to plan for blending variations in the ore so as to maintain, as
nearly as possible, a uniform feed to the mill.
At another operation it may be desirable to completely separate two kinds of ore, as for example,
a low- grade deposit where one kind of "oxide" ore must be treated by acid leach, but a second
kind of "sulfide" ore must be treated by different methods.
The grade and tonnage of material available will determine how much waste rock can be
stripped, and there is often an ultimate limit to the pit that is determined more by the economics
of removing overburden than a sudden change in the ore deposit from mineral to non-mineral
bearing material. The ultimate pit limit and the slope of the pit walls are therefore determined as
much by economics and engineering as by geological structure. Material that is relatively high
grade may be left unmined in some awkward spot extending back too deeply beneath waste
The typical large open pit mining operation that has been in production for 10 years and more is
operating under conditions that could not possibly have been foreseen by the original planners of
the mine.
Metal prices, machinery, and milling methods are constantly changing so that the larger
operations must be periodically reevaluated, and several have been completely redeveloped
from time to time as entirely different kinds of mining and milling operations.
Sometimes the preliminary stripping of the waste overburden is contracted to firms specializing in
earthmoving. Mining is usually done by track-mounted electric shovels in the large operations,
and by rubber-tired diesel front-end loaders in the smaller operations. Scrapers are sometimes
used in special situations.
Large bucket-wheel excavators of the kind used in European coal mines have not been applied
to metal mining, because this equipment is best adapted to softer bedded, relatively flat-lying
strata.
1.1) Open pit Mining method
Stripping overburden
Location of haul roads
Equipment size of trucks and fleet Surface Mining methods (Open pit Mining method)
Pit slope angle and stability
2 February 2016 Prof. Dr. H.Z. Harraz Presentation
Mining Methods, Surface mining
Typical Non-haul Typical Catch Typical
Outside Dump Road bench Bench Wall Berm Haul Road
Dust
Locality: Región de Antofagasta, Chile.
Pit dimensions: 4.3 km long x 3 km wide x 850 m deep. Slope failure
Mining dates: 1915 -present
Total production: 29 million tons of copper to the end of 2007 (excluding Radomiro Tomić production). For many
years it was the mine with the largest annual production in the world, but was recently overtaken by Minera
Escondida (Chile). It remains the mine with the largest total cumulative production.
Production 2007: 896,308 fine metric tons of copper (Codelco, 2007).
Mining cost in 2007: 48.5 US¢ per kg (2006), 73.0 US¢ per kg (2007) (Codelco, 2007).
Employees: 8,420 as of 31st 2007 (Codelco, 2007).
Pre-tax profits: US$ 9.215 billion (2006), US$ 8,451 billion (2007) (Codelco, 2007).
A Dragline Shovel
Drilling in pit
Used for near-surface, laterally continuous, bedded deposits such as coal, stratified ores such
as iron ore, and surficial deposits (nickel laterite or bauxite).
When orebodies are flat-lying and close to surface, it is sometimes economical to remove the overlying rock to
expose the orebody.
Strip mining is ideally applied where the surface of the ground and the ore body itself are relatively
horizontal and not too deep under the surface, and a wide area is available to be mined in a series of strips.
The surface soil is stripped off and stockpiled for later land reclaimation.
A stripping dragline with a long-boom or long reach shovels are common.
The pits are shallower that open-pit mines, and the overburden is “hind-cast” directly into adjacent
mined out panels.
It is a very low-cost, high-productivity method of mining.
Typical examples of this type of mining are the larger tonnage coal mining operations in Mpumulanga.
Why……………..?
The ore is close to the surface of the land (30m) but has one or more layers of rock
and dirt on top of it. To mine the ore, these layers have to be taken off.
This mining is done in long, narrow strips. When the ore is done in one strip, the
miners begin to create another strip next to it. The waste, dirt, and rock that they
take off of the top of the next strip is put on top of the last one.
Example: Alcoa’s
Sierra de Bahoruco
Aluminum mining
in D.R. Southern
Peninsula until 1985
"Strip mining" is the practice of mining a seam of mineral by first removing a
long strip of overlying soil and rock (the overburden). It is most commonly used to mine
coal or tar sand. Strip mining is only practical when the ore body to be excavated is
relatively near the surface. This type of mining uses some of the largest machines on
earth, including bucket-wheel excavators which can move as much as 12,000 cubic
meters of earth per hour.
There are two forms of strip mining. The more common method is:-
i) "Area stripping", which is used on fairly flat terrain, to extract deposits over a
large area. As each long strip is excavated, the overburden is placed in the
excavation produced by the previous strip.
ii) "Contour stripping" involves removing the overburden above the mineral
seam near the outcrop in hilly terrain, where the mineral outcrop usually follows
the contour of the land. Contour stripping is often followed by auger mining into
the hillside, to remove more of the mineral. This method commonly leaves
behind terraces in mountain sides.
Among others, strip mining is used to extract the oil-impregnated sand in the
Athabasca Tar Sands in Alberta. It is also common in coal mining. Bucket-wheel
excavators are widely used for this purpose, however, they are prone to damage and
require many millions of dollars to repair.
Figure shows Strip mining with dragline (on overburden) and rope
shovel (below, loading coal)
“Highwalls”
Contour Mining in KY
2 February 2016 Prof. Dr. H.Z. Harraz Presentation
Mining Methods, Surface mining
OPEN CAST
Mining Process
1. Shovel + Dumper
2. Dragline
3. Surface Miner
Different OC Machinery
4. Bucket Wheel Excavator
5. In-pit crushing + Spreader
Placer and solution mining are among the most economical of all mining
methods but can only be applied to limited categories of mineral deposits.
2.1.2) Dredging mining: Generally used most often for mineral-sands and some near-shore alluvial
diamond mining operations. Dredging performed from floating vessels, accomplishes the
extraction of the minerals mechanically or hydraulically.
"Dredging" is a method often used to bring up underwater mineral deposits. Although dredging is
usually employed to clear or enlarge waterways for boats, it can also recover significant amounts
of underwater minerals relatively efficiently and cheaply.
The dissolving solution is pumped into the orebody from a series of injection wells, and is then
pumped out, together with salts dissolved from the orebody from a series of extraction
(production) wells.
Metals and minerals commonly mined by solution mining methods.
Dissolving agent specified in each case. (From Hartman and Mutmansky,
2002, and references therein).
Approximate
Metal or Mineral Dissolution Agent/ Method
Primary production
Gold 35% Sodium cyanide (NaCN)
Silver 25% Sodium cyanide (NaCN) Aside: The same
Copper 30% Sulphuric acid (H2SO4); Ammonium carbonate (alkali) reagents are often
{(NH4)2CO3} used for processing
Uranium 75% Sulphuric acid (H2SO4); Ammonium carbonate (alkali)
{(NH4)2CO3} mined ores in
Common Salt 50% Water hydrometallurgical
Potash 20% Water plants
Trona 20% Water
Boron 20% Hydrochloric acid (HCl)
Magnesium 85% Seawater, lake brine processing
Sulfur 35% Hot water (melting)
Lithium 100% Lake brine processing
Solution mining includes both borehole mining, such as the methods used to extract sodium
chloride or sulfur, and leaching, either through drillholes or in dumps or heaps on the surface.
Problems:
Little control of the solution underground and difficulty in ensuring the process
solutions do not migrate away from the immediate area of leaching.
Main impact of evaporite ISL is derived from surface or shallow groundwater
contamination in the vicinity of evaporation ponds. Pregnant solutions can be
highly corrosive and pyhto-toxic, and can react with the soil materials used in
pond construction, and may migrate to surrounding areas through seepage,
overflow (both bad practice),and windblown spray.
Surface subsidence and the development of sink-holes may also occur after
prolonged solution mining if inadequate un-mined material is left to support
the overburden (bad practice).
A low salinity fluid, either heated or not, is injected underground directly into the
evaporite layer; the “pregnant” solutions (brines) are withdrawn from recovery
boreholes and are pumped into evaporation ponds, to allow the salts to crystallize
out as the water evaporates.
2 February 2016 71
Heap Leach Operation
Installing a Plastic Membrane Liner
Layout of copper bio-heap pilot plant
PLS, Crushing,
Heaps
Raffinate Agglomeration
SX-EW (off Auxiliary, Ponds
photo) Ponds
•Disadvantages
•Lower recoveries than mill/float or mill/leach
•Long leach cycles and hold-up
•Lengthy experimental programmes
•Large footprint
•Acid-mine drainage of wastes
Undersea (or Oceans) Mining
• We extract minerals (e.g., magnesium) from seawater
• Minerals are dredged from the ocean floor
Sulfur, phosphate, calcium carbonate (for cement), silica (insulation and glass), copper, zinc, silver, gold
• Manganese nodules = small, ball-shaped ores scattered across the ocean floor
Mining them is currently uneconomical
Manganese Nodules (pacific ocean)– ore nodules crystallized from hot solutions arising from volcanic
activity. Contain manganese, iron copper and nickel.
• Hydrothermal vents may have gold, silver, zinc
• Mining would destroy habitats and organisms and release toxic metals that could enter the food
chain
1) Minerals are found in seawater, but occur in too low of a concentration
2) Continental shelf can be mined
3) Deep Ocean are extremely expensive to extract (not currently viable)