Mining 101
Mining 101
AP Environmental Science
The Principles of Mining
• Mining is the extraction of valuable
minerals or other geological materials from
the earth from an orebody, lode, vein,
seam, or reef, which forms the mineralized
package of economic interest to the miner.
Mining
• Mining is required to obtain any material
that cannot be grown through agricultural
processes, or created artificially in a
laboratory or factory.
• Mining in a wider sense includes
extraction of any non-renewable resource
such as petroleum, natural gas, or even
water.
Land Claim
• A MINING Land Claim is a parcel of land
for which the claimant has asserted a right
of possession and the right to develop and
extract a discovered, valuable, mineral
deposit.
• There are three basic types of minerals on
federally-administered lands: locatable,
leasable, and salable. Mining claims are
staked on locatable minerals on public
domain lands.
Locatable,Salable and Leasable
• Locatable minerals include gold, silver, copper
and other hard rock minerals. (purchased or
acquired land - General Mining Law of 1872
• Salable minerals, such as sand, gravel, stone
and clay require a contract or permit to mine
• Leasable minerals include oil and gas, oil shale,
geothermal resources, potash, sodium, native
asphalt, solid and semisolid bitumen,
bituminous rock, phosphate, and coal.
Economic mineralogy
• Study of minerals
heavily used in
manufacturing.
• Important part of
domestic &
international
commerce
• Mostly metal ores
• Some non-metallics
are: graphite, quartz,
diamonds.
Metal Resources
Metal Uses Millions Metric
Tons Annually
Iron Heavy machinery, steel production 740
Mine Safety:
In U.S., stringent
mining regulations
have lead to a
reduction in fatalities,
both in terms of total
deaths per year, deaths
per person-hour
worked, and deaths
per ton mined. surface
Health Problems
• mine collapse
• fire (methane, coal dust, etc.).
• asphyxiation (methane, carbon
monoxide)
• pneumoconiosis (from inhaling
coal dust)
• asbestosis (from inhaling
asbestos fibers)
• silicosis (from inhaling silicate
dust)
• heavy metal poisoning (e.g.
mercury)
• radiation exposure (in uranium
mining)
Black Lung/ CWP
• Black lung disease is a common name for
any lung disease that develops from
inhaling coal dust. This name comes from
the fact that those with the disease have
lungs that look black instead of pink.
Medically, it is a type of pneumoconioss
called coal workers' pneumoconiosis
(CWP).
MSHA
• Mine Safety and Health Administration
(MSHA) is an agency of the United States
Department of Labor which administers the
provisions of the Federal Mine Safety and
Health Act of 1977 (Mine Act) to enforce
compliance with mandatory safety and health
standards, eliminate fatal accidents, reduce
the frequency and severity of nonfatal
accidents, minimize health hazards, and to
promote improved safety and health
conditions in the nation's mines. [
Environmental Damage
• Gaping holes in ground (old open pit mines)
• Tailings and Spoil Banks- cause Acid Mine Drainage
• Accidental draining of rivers and lakes
• Disruption of ground water flow patterns
• Loss of topsoil in strip-mined regions (350 to 2,700 km2 in US
alone)
• Contamination from sulfuric acid (H2SO4) produced through
weathering of iron sulfide (FeS2, pyrite) in tailings.
– 4FeS2 + 14H2O = 4Fe(OH)3 + 8H2SO4
• Water leaking into mine shafts, washes dissolved metals &
toxic material into water sources.
– (550,000 abandoned mines in U.S.- 12,000 mi of rivers &
streams contaminated with mine drainage- cost to clean
up $32-$72 billion)
Lake Peigneur, Louisiana
• Lake Peigneur WAS a freshwater lake then
on November 20, 1980, a Texaco oil rig
accidentally drilled into the Diamond Crystal
Salt Company salt mine under the lake. It
created a giant hole that resulted in a
whirlpool which sucked in the drilling platform,
eleven barges, many trees and 65 acres
(260,000 m2) of the surrounding terrain and
the entire Lake Peigneur. Oops.
Mine Tailings (Waste)
• Tailings, also called mine dumps, culm
dumps, slimes, tails, refuse, leach residue
or slickens,
• Tailing are the materials left over after the
process of separating the valuable fraction
from the uneconomic fraction (gangue) of an
ore.
• Tailing waste contaminates the soil and water
with leaching of heavy metals (e.g. arsenic,
mercury)
Coeur D' Alene Mine in Colorado