Engineering closure of an open pit gold operation in a semi-arid climate


Autoria(s): Williams, D. J.; Currey, A. N.
Contribuinte(s)

R. K. Singhal

Data(s)

01/01/2002

Resumo

Along with material characteristics and geometry, the climate in which a mine is located can have a dramatic effect on the appropriate options for rehabilitation. The paper outlines the setting, mining, milling and waste disposal at Kidston Gold Mine's open pit operations in the semi-arid climate of North Queensland, Australia, before focusing on the engineering aspects of the rehabilitation of Kidston. The mine took a holistic and proactive approach to rehabilitation, and was prepared to demonstrate a number of innovative approaches, which are described in the paper. Engineering issues that had to be addressed included the geotechnical stability and deformation of waste rock dumps, including a 240 m high in-pit dump: the construction and performance monitoring of a “store and release” cover over potentially acid forming mineralised waste rock; erosion from the side slopes of the waste rock dumps; the in-pit co-disposal of waste rock and thickened tailings; the geotechnical stability of the tailings dam wall; the potential for erosion of bare tailings; the water balance of the tailings dam; direct revegetation of the tailings; and the pit hydrology. The rehabilitation of the mine represents an important benchmark in mine site rehabilitation best practice, from which lessons applicable worldwide can be shared.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:63864

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Swets & Zeitlinger Publishers

Palavras-Chave #Acid mine drainage #covers #open pit mining #rehabilitation #tailings dam #waste rock dump #C1 #290805 Geotechnical Engineering #771000 Mining Environments
Tipo

Journal Article