cross-posted from: https://slrpnk.net/post/5856215

Good article that shows how mine dumps can be reclaimed to support human use (drive in) and how re-mining of wastes can be feasible in some cases

  • TroyM
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    6
    ·
    10 months ago

    Storytime. I was working in my first industry gig, still a student – the exploration office for a major nickel mine. I had been hired for the summer along with a bunch of other students. The following happened to another student.

    She was a Master’s student who was given the job of sending drill core coming into the exploration warehouse to assay. Not cutting the core – but selecting the samples, doing the paperwork etc. Her supervisor, however, immediately went on vacation, so she didn’t have enough training. Worried that she wasn’t checking the right assay boxes, she just checked all of them. The samples came back so high in platinum and palladium that the nickel would have been a smelter credit. No one at the mine had ever done an assay for platinum or palladium before in the 60+ year history of the mine. This triggered a huge flurry of activity while they assayed a bunch of other things, including their tailings. 2008 happened (and the exploration economy faltered) so I don’t know what came of it because I moved on. But, yeah, mine waste isn’t always waste ;)

    • Track_Shovel@slrpnk.netOP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      4
      ·
      10 months ago

      I don’t want to say this happens ‘a lot’ but it’s not uncommon. I have a site on my roster where they re-mined their tailings for beryllium… in the 80s. That said, while remining does happen, we need to be careful of buying into greenwashing and the argument that since a couple mines have had success with remining, that it is sufficient reason not to conduct progressive reclamation or advance closure efforts. A lot of mines have not planned for closure, and 70% of mines do not complete their mine plan (in that they sell to someone else or go bankrupt, resulting in an abandoned mine).