Aquifer Vulnerability Mapping In Karstic Terrain Antamina Mine, Peru

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
David Evans Henri Letient Tom Aley
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
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13
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2637 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2005

Abstract

Antamina is a large open-pit copper and zinc mine located within the Central Andes of Northern Peru at an altitude of 4300 masl. The facilities are situated within the headwaters of several watersheds, within the Amazon basin. Nearby villages rely heavily on springs and streams for drinking and irrigation water. The principle source of baseflow during the dry season is from Cretaceous karstic limestone aquifers. Antamina will produce nearly 1.4 billion tonnes of waste rock over its mine life. Finding suitable sites for storing large volumes of waste rock is often a challenging task – especially in karstic, alpine terrain. Detailed hydrogeological investigations are essential for delineating the karstic hydrogeologic watersheds associated with the proposed waste facilities, which are often very different than topographic (hydrologic) watersheds. Contamination vulnerability mapping at Antamina consisted of geological and karst mapping, geophysical surveys, geochemical testing, dye-tracer studies, drilling and aquifer testing. Detailed mapping followed by dye-tracer studies proved to be the most cost-effective methods for characterizing the karst aquifer systems. The results were used to optimize waste rock management at the site to minimize potential impacts on groundwater resources.
Citation

APA: David Evans Henri Letient Tom Aley  (2005)  Aquifer Vulnerability Mapping In Karstic Terrain Antamina Mine, Peru

MLA: David Evans Henri Letient Tom Aley Aquifer Vulnerability Mapping In Karstic Terrain Antamina Mine, Peru. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2005.

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