Introduction To Mining
Introduction To Mining
INTRODUCTION TO MINING
1.1 MININGS CONTRIBUTION TO CIVILIZATION
Mining may well have been the second of humankinds earliest endeavors
granted that agriculture was the rst. The two industries ranked together as
the primary or basic industries of early civilization. Little has changed in the
importance of these industries since the beginning of civilization. If we consider
shing and lumbering as part of agriculture and oil and gas production as part
of mining,then agriculture and mining continue to supply all the basic
resources used by modern civilization.
From prehistoric times to the present,mining has played an important part
in human existence (Madigan,1981). Here the term mining is used in its
broadest context as encompassing the extraction of any naturally occurring
mineral substances solid,liquid, and gas from the earth or other heavenly
bodies for utilitarian purposes. The most prominent of these uses for minerals
are identied in Table 1.1.
The history of mining is fascinating. It parallels the history of civilization,
with many important cultural eras associated with and identied by various
minerals or their derivatives: the Stone Age (prior to 4000 ...),the Bronze
Age (4000 to 5000 ...),the Iron Age (1500 ... to 1780 ..),the Steel
Age (1780 to 1945),and the Nuclear Age (1945 to the present). Many milestones
in human history Marco Polos journey to China,Vasco da Gamas voyages
to Africa and India,Columbuss discovery of the New World, and the modern
gold rushes that led to the settlement of California,Alaska, South Africa,
Australia,and the Canadian Klondike were achieved with minerals providing a major incentive (Rickard,1932). Other interesting aspects of mining and
metallurgical history can be found by referring to the historical record
provided by Gregory (1980),Raymond (1984),and Lacy and Lacy (1992).
1
INTRODUCTION TO MINING
Table 1.1
Need or Use
Tools and utensils
Weapons
Ornaments and decoration
Currency
Structures and devices
Energy
Machinery
Electronics
Nuclear ssion
Purpose
Food,shelter
Hunting,defense,warfare
Jewelry,cosmetics,dye
Monetary exchange
Shelter,transport
Heat,power
Industry
Computers,communications
Power,warfare
Age
Prehistoric
Prehistoric
Ancient
Early
Early
Medieval
Modern
Modern
Modern
MINING TERMINOLOGY
INTRODUCTION TO MINING
and natural gas has evolved into a separate industry with a specialized
technology of its own. These mineral products will not be discussed in any
detail here.
The essence of mining in extracting mineral wealth from the earth is to drive
an excavation or excavations from the surface to the mineral deposit. Normally,these openings into the earth are meant to allow personnel to enter into
the underground deposit. However,boreholes are at times used to extract the
mineral values from the earth. These elds of boreholes are also called mines,
as they are the means to mine a mineral deposit,even if no one enters into the
geologic realm of the deposit. Note that when the economic protability of a
mineral deposit has been established with some condence, ore or ore deposit
is preferred as the descriptive term for the mineral occurrence. However,coal
and industrial mineral deposits are often not so designated,even if their
protability has been rmly established. If the excavation used for mining is
entirely open or operated from the surface,it is termed a surface mine. If the
excavation consists of openings for human entry below the earths surface,it is
called an underground mine. The details of the procedure,layout, and equipment used in the mine distinguish the mining method. This is determined by the
geologic,physical, environmental,economic, and legal circumstances that
pertain to the ore deposit being mined.
Mining is never properly done in isolation,nor is it an entity in itself. It is
preceded by geologic investigations that locate the deposit and economic
analyses that prove it nancially feasible. Following extraction of the fuel,
industrial mineral,or metallic ore, the run-of-mine material is generally cleaned
or concentrated. This preparation or beneciation of the mineral into a
higher-quality product is termed mineral processing. The mineral products so
produced may then undergo further concentration,renement,or fabrication
during conversion, smelting,or rening to provide consumer products. The end
step in converting a mineral material into a useful product is marketing.
Quite frequently,excavation in the earth is employed for purposes other
than mining. These include civil and military works in which the object is to
produce a stable opening of a desired size,orientation, and permanence.
Examples are vehicular,water, and sewer tunnels,plus underground storage
facilities,waste disposal areas, and military installations. Many of these
excavations are produced by means of standard mining technology.
Professionally,the elds of endeavor associated with the mineral industries
are linked to the phase or stage in which an activity occurs. Locating and
exploring a mineral deposit fall in the general province of geology and the earth
sciences. Mining engineering,already dened, encompasses the proving (with
the geologist),planning, developing, and exploiting of a mineral deposit. The
mining engineer may also be involved with the closure and reclamation of
the mine property,although he or she may share those duties with those in the
environmental elds. The elds of processing,rening, and fabricating are
assigned to metallurgy,although there is often some overlap in the mineral
processing area with mining engineering.
INTRODUCTION TO MINING
During the last two centuries,there has been great progress in mining
technology in many different areas. Such progress is often made in an
evolutionary rather than a revolutionary manner. Yet every once in a while,a
revolutionary discovery comes along and changes the process of mining
profoundly. During the nineteenth century,the invention of dynamite was the
most important advance. In the twentieth century,the invention of continuous
mining equipment,which extracts the softer minerals like coal without the use
of explosives,was perhaps the most notable of these acccomplishments. The
rst continuous miner was tested in about 1940,with its usefulness greatly
enhanced by the development of tungsten carbide inserts in 1945 by McKenna
Metals Company (now Kennametal). By 1950 the continuous miner had
started to replace other coal mining methods. The era of mechanized mining
had begun.
It is not possible to chronicle all of the developments that made mining what
it is today. A more complete chronology of the important events is outlined in
Table 1.2. It has been prepared using the references cited in Section 1.1,as well
as those by Stack (1982) and Molloy (1986). These sources can be used to
obtain a more comprehensive list of the crucial events in the development of
mining technology.
Date
Event
450,000 ...
First mining (at surface),by Paleolithic humans for stone
implements.
40,000
Surface mining progresses underground, in Swaziland, Africa.
30,000
Fired clay pots used in Czechoslovakia.
18,000
Possible use of gold and copper in native form.
5000
Fire setting,used by Egyptians to break rock.
4000
Early use of fabricated metals; start of Bronze Age.
3400
First recorded mining,of turquoise by Egyptians in Sinai.
3000
Probable rst smelting,of copper with coal by Chinese; rst use of iron
implements by Egyptians.
2000
Earliest known gold artifacts in New World,in Peru.
1000
Steel used by Greeks.
100 ..
Thriving Roman mining
industry.
122
Coal used by Romans in present-day United Kingdom.
1185
Edict by bishop of Trent gives rights to miners.
1524
First recorded mining in New World,by Spaniards in Cuba.
1550
First use of lift pump,at Joachimstal, Czechoslovakia.
1556
First mining technical work, De Re Metallica,published in Germany by
Georgius Agricola.
1585
Discovery of iron ore in North America,in North Carolina.
1600s
Mining commences in eastern United States (iron,coal, lead,gold).
1627
Explosives rst used in European mines,in Hungary (possible prior use
in China).
1646
First blast furnace installed in North America,in Massachusetts.
1716
First school of mines established,at Joachimstal, Czechoslovakia.
1780
Beginning of Industrial Revolution; pumps are rst modern machines
used in mines.
1800s
Mining progresses in United States; gold rushes help open the West.
1815
Sir Humphrey Davy invents miners safety lamp in England.
1855
Bessemer steel process rst used,in England.
1867
Dynamite invented by Nobel,applied to mining.
1903
Era of mechanization and mass production opens in U.S. mining with
development of rst low-grade copper porphyry,in Utah; although
the rst modern mine was an open pit,subsequent operations were
underground as well.
1940
First continuous miner initiates the era of mining without explosives.
1945
Tungsten carbide bits developed by McKenna Metals Company (now
Kennametal).
1.4.1 Prospecting
Prospecting,the rst stage in the utilization of a mineral deposit, is the search
for ores or other valuable minerals (coal or nonmetallics). Because mineral
deposits may be located either at or below the surface of the earth,both direct
and indirect prospecting techniques are employed.
Procedure
Time
Cost/Unit Cost
1 3 yr
$0.2 10 million
or $0.05 1.00/ton
($0.05 1.10/tonne)
2 5 yr
$1 15 million
or $0.20 1.50/ton
($0.22 1.65/tonne)
2 5 yr
Precursors to Mining
1. Prospecting
(Mineral deposit)
2. Exploration
(Ore body)
3. Development
(Prospect)
Stage/
(Project Name)
4. Exploitation
(Mine)
Procedure
Time
Cost/Unit Cost
Large-scale production of
ore
a. Factors in choice of
method: geologic,
geographic,economic,
environmental,societal
safety
b. Types of mining methods
Surface: open pit,open
cast,etc.
Underground: room and
pillar,block caving, etc.
c. Monitor costs and economic
payback (3 10 yr)
10 30 yr $5 75 million/yr
or $2.00 150/ton
($2.20 165/tonne)
Post-mining
5. Reclamation
(Real estate)
Restoration of site
a. Removal of plant and
buildings
b. Reclamation of waste
and tailings dumps
c. Monitoring of discharges
1 10 yr $1 20 million
$0.20 4.00/ton
($0.22 4.40/tonne)
1.4.2 Exploration
The second stage in the life of a mine, exploration,determines as accurately as
possible the size and value of a mineral deposit,utilizing techniques similar to
but more rened than those used in prospecting. The line of demarcation
between prospecting and exploration is not sharp; in fact,a distinction may
not be possible in some cases. Exploration generally shifts to surface and
subsurface locations,using a variety of measurements to obtain a more positive
picture of the extent and grade of the ore body. Representative samples may
be subjected to chemical,metallurgical, X ray, spectrographic, or radiometric
evaluation techniques that are meant to enhance the investigators knowledge
of the mineral deposit. Samples are obtained by chipping outcrops,trenching,
tunneling,and drilling; in addition, borehole logs may be provided to study the
geologic and structural makeup of the deposit. Rotary,percussion, or diamond
drills can be used for exploration purposes. However,diamond drills are
favored because the cores they yield provide knowledge of the geologic
structure. The core is normally split along its axis; one half is analyzed,and the
other half is retained intact for further geologic study.
An evaluation of the samples enables the geologist or mining engineer to
calculate the tonnage and grade,or richness, of the mineral deposit. He or she
estimates the mining costs,evaluates the recovery of the valuable minerals,
determines the environmental costs,and assesses other foreseeable factors in an
effort to reach a conclusion about the protability of the mineral deposit. The crux
of the analysis is the question of whether the property is just another mineral
deposit or an ore body. For an ore deposit,the overall process is called reserve
estimation, that is, the examination and valuation of the ore body. At the conclusion
of this stage,the project is developed, traded to another party,or abandoned.
1.4.3 Development
In the third stage, development,the work of opening a mineral deposit for
exploitation is performed. With it begins the actual mining of the deposit,now
called the ore. Access to the deposit must be gained either (1) by stripping the
overburden,which is the soil and/or rock covering the deposit, to expose the
near-surface ore for mining or (2) by excavating openings from the surface to
access more deeply buried deposits to prepare for underground mining.
In either case,certain preliminary development work, such as acquiring
water and mineral rights,buying surface lands, arranging for nancing, and
preparing permit applications and an environmental impact statement (EIS),
will generally be required before any development takes place. When these
steps have been achieved,the provision of a number of requirements access
roads,power sources,mineral
transportation systems, mineral processing
facilities,waste disposal areas, ofces, and other support facilities must
precede actual mining in most cases. Stripping of the overburden will then
proceed if the minerals are to be mined at the surface. Economic considerations
particularly if the area is open to the general public. The removal of ofce
buildings,processing facilities, transportation equipment,utilities, and other
surface structures must generally be accomplished. The mining company is
then required to seal all mine shafts,adits, and other openings that may present
physical hazards. Any existing highwalls or other geologic structures may
require mitigation to prevent injuries or death due to geologic failures.
The second major issue to be addressed during reclamation of a mine site
is restoration of the land surface,the water quality, and the waste disposal
areas so that long-term water pollution,soil erosion,dust generation,or
vegetation problems do not occur. The restoration of native plants is often a
very important part of this process,as the plants help build a stable soil
structure and naturalize the area. It may be necessary to carefully place any
rock or tailings with acid-producing properties in locations where rainfall has
little effect on the material and acid production is minimized. The same may
be true of certain of the heavy metals that pollute streams. Planning of the
waste dumps,tailings ponds, and other disturbed areas will help prevent
pollution problems,but remediation work may also be necessary to complete
the reclamation stage of mining and satisfy the regulatory agencies.
The nal concern of the mine planning engineer may be the subsequent use
of the land after mining is completed. Old mine sites have been converted to
wildlife refuges,shopping malls, golf courses,airports, lakes, underground
storage facilities,real estate developments, solid waste disposal areas,and other
uses that can benet society. By planning the mine for a subsequent development,mine planners can enhance the value of the mined land and help convert
it to a use that the public will consider favorable. The successful completion of
the reclamation of a mine will enhance public opinion of the mining industry
and keep the mining company in the good graces of the regulatory agencies.
The fth stage of the mine is thus of paramount importance and should be
planned at the earliest possible time in the life of the mine.
1.5 UNIT OPERATIONS OF MINING
During the development and exploitation stages of mining when natural
materials are extracted from the earth,remarkably similar unit operations are
normally employed. The unit operations of mining are the basic steps used to
produce mineral from the deposit,and the auxiliary operations that are used
to support them. The steps contributing directly to mineral extraction are
production operations,which constitute the production cycle of operations. The
ancillary steps that support the production cycle are termed auxiliary operations.
The production cycle employs unit operations that are normally grouped
into rock breakage and materials handling. Breakage generally consists of
drilling and blasting,and materials handling encompasses loading or excavation and haulage (horizontal transport) and sometimes hoisting (vertical or
FIGURE 1.1. The role of nonfuel minerals in the U.S. economy (estimated values in 1998).
Source: U.S. Geological Survey (1999).
worth of industrial minerals,$20 billion worth of coal, and $12 billion worth
of metals (National Mining Association,1998). Additional information on the
value of minerals production in the United States can be found in Figure 1.1
(U.S. Geological Survey,1999). This gure shows that the net value of exports
of nonfuel mineral raw materials and materials processed from minerals has a
value of about $35 billion per annum. In addition,about 355,000 people are
employed by the mining industry in the United States,and every man,woman,
and child in this country requires 23 tons (21 tonnes) of minerals,including
nearly 4 tons (3.6 tonnes) of coal,each year to maintain his or her modern
lifestyle (National Mining Association,1998).
World consumption of minerals has increased to such an extent in modern
times that more minerals were used in the twentieth century than were used
since the beginning of history. This has occurred because we are now a society
that depends on automobiles,trains,and airplanes for transportation; telephones,television, and computers for communications; fertilizers and heavy
machinery for our agricultural output; industrial minerals for home building
products; and coal-red and nuclear plants for our electrical power. These
human and industrial services in turn depend on the production of minerals
and mineral products in great amounts.
The United States produces a very large tonnage of mineral products,but
it has nevertheless become a major and growing importer of minerals,as shown
in Figure 1.2. This country now imports more than 70% of its potash,
chromium,tungsten, tin, and cobalt, plus almost all (better than 90%) of its
uorspar,manganese, and aluminum ore. Although it has increased imports of
FIGURE 1.2. U.S. net import reliance for selected nonfuel mineral materials in 1998. Source:
U.S. Geological Survey (1999).
many minerals,the United States is also producing more of the platinum group
metals,gold,and diamonds.
Conservation of mineral resources is currently an important issue to the
general public. Society is becoming much more cognizant of the need to
conserve energy,minerals,and the environment. Accordingly,the mining
industry has endorsed a policy that favors extraction of minerals in a more
sustainable manner (National Mining Association,1998). This policy favors
mining as long as the effects on the environment or the economic welfare are
not a burden on future generations. Extreme conservationist groups often
attempt to push for punitive regulatory controls of mining activities and even
a ban on mining. However,societal needs dictate that a compromise between
the most strident conservationist viewpoint and the most open mineral
development concept be adopted for the present and the future. This text
attempts to present a balanced approach to mining in the environmental world
in which we live.
1.6.2 Mineral Economics
The uniqueness of minerals as economic products accounts for the complexity
of mineral economics and the business of mining (Vogely,1985; Strauss,1986).
Minerals are unevenly distributed and,unlike agricultural or forest products,
cannot reproduce or be replaced. A mineral deposit may therefore be considered a depleting asset whose production is restricted to the area in which it
occurs. These factors impose limitations on a mining company in the areas of
business practices,nancing,and production practices. Because its mineral
assets are constantly being depleted,a mining company must discover additional reserves or acquire them by purchase to stay in the mining business.
Other peculiar features of the mineral industries are associated with operations. Production costs tend to increase with depth and declining grade. Thus,
low-cost operations are mined rst,followed by the harder-to-mine deposits.
In addition,commodity prices are subject to market price swings in response
to supply and demand,which can make the nancial risk of a long-term
minerals project quite risky. A change in mining or processing technology can
also drastically alter the economic landscape. The pattern of usage,in terms of
intensity of use (lb/capita or kg/capita) and total consumption of metals on the
world market for the nonferrous metals,shows that the intensity of usage of
many of these metals continues to go down while overall consumption goes up
(Crowson,1998). Any swing in intensity of use due to substitution or recycling
can greatly affect the market price of a metal. Mining companies must therefore
keep their prices low by further improvements in productivity,or market price
drops can easily create great economic hardships.
Some minerals,such as precious metals, iron,and most of the base metals,
can be recycled economically,thereby affecting the markets for freshly mined
metal. This is good practice and favorable for the future of humankind,but it
can create economic problems if the market price is adversely affected.
FIGURE 1.3. Periods in the growth of a countrys mineral industries. (After Hewett, 1929;
Lovering, 1943. By permission from the Society for Mining, Metallurgy, and Exploration, Inc.,
Littleton, CO.)
4. Period of rapid depletion of inexpensive raw materials at home: Everincreasing costs of mining and materials produced; more and more energy
is required to get the same amount of raw material. Mines and smelters
continue to decline. Some foreign markets are lost; foreign imports,both
raw materials and manufactured products,invade the home market.
5. Period of decreasing internal and external markets: Increasing dependence
on foreign sources of raw materials brings increasing costs to manufacturers. This period can be characterized by a decreasing standard of
living with its accompanying social and political problems; quotas,tariffs,
subsidies,cartels,and other articial expedients are used in the effort to
maintain a competitive price in the domestic and world markets. This is
a period of decreasing commercial power.
As current-day examples of the cycle in Figure 1.3,many less-developed
countries fall into period 1,Australia into period 2, Russia in period 3, the
United States in period 4,and the United Kingdom and Japan in period 5.
Some economists maintain that this cycle is oversimplied and that it can be
modied by technology or dedication to efcient production. For example,
Japan after World War II arose from the ashes to become a world power
without the benet of extensive mineral resources. The Japanese had previously
extracted nearly all of their inexpensive minerals. However,they purchased raw
materials on the open market,created efcient automobile and electronics
industries,and prospered by means of the value added to the mineral
products.
At times during its history,the U.S. government has maintained a stockpile
of strategic minerals to guard against shortages in case of war or economic
blackmail. The practice became common after 1939 and sharply increased after
1946 because of Cold War tensions. More recently,the government has been
reducing its stockpiles. This shift is the result of better access to minerals
around the world and a less threatening world political scene since the breakup
of the Soviet Union. Mineral companies have often been critical of the
stockpiling policy,inasmuch as sudden large purchases from the stockpile can
have drastic effects on the price of a given commodity. An informative history
of the U.S. strategic minerals stockpile is given by Perkins (1997).
A further aspect of mineral economics concerns the nancing and marketing
of mines and mineral properties. Mining enterprises are nanced in much the
same manner as other businesses (Wanless,1984; Tinsley et al.,1985). Because of
greater nancial risks,however, the expected return on investment is higher and
the payback period shortened in a mining enterprise. Mineral properties as
well as mines are marketable. The selling price is determined generally by a
valuation based on the report of an engineer or geologist; the value of future
earnings is usually discounted to the date of purchase in computing the present
value of the property. Mineral properties may be determined to have worth
because they are very rich,very large, easily accessible,in great demand,
favorably located,cheaply mineable,or militarily strategic.
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INTRODUCTION TO MINING
Domestic (P)
Country
Total
State
Total
District
Tonnage
Percentage
Value
Total
Company
Total
Mine
Domestic Use
Imports (I)
Country
Tonnage
Total
Scrap (S)
Exports (E)
Tonnage
Country
Tonnage
Stockpile (SP)
Private
Tonnage
Government
Total
tonnage
Apparent
tonnage
C = P S I E SP
=
Sources:
PROBLEMS
23
Select one of the web sites listed in Section 1.7 (or use one selected for
you by your instructor) and write a one- or two-page summary of the
important elements of the web site. Evaluate the usefulness of the
information found therein. Your instructor may ask you to share these
with your classmates for future use.
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1.2
INTRODUCTION TO MINING