Chemical Mining - Theoretical And Practical Aspects

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Paul W. Johnson
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
25
File Size:
1906 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1967

Abstract

Chemical mining is the in situ extraction of metals from ores located within the confines of a mine (broken or fractured ore, stope fill, caved material, ores in permeable zones) or in dumps, prepared ore heaps, slag heaps, and tailing ponds on the surface. These materials represent an enormous, untapped, potential source of all types of metals. The field of chemical mining, now in its infancy, encompasses the preparation of ore for subsequent in-place leaching, the flow of solutions and ionic species through rock masses and within rock pores, the leaching of minerals with inexpensive and regenerable lixiviants under prevailing conditions of the in-place environment, the generation and regeneration of such solutions, and the recovery of metals or metal compounds from the metal-bearing liquors. It is not inconceivable that eventually our ore reserves will consist largely of low-grade, refractory, and inaccessible new deposits and low-grade zones near previously worked deposits, caved and gob-filled stopes, waste dumps, tailing ponds, and slag-heaps. Chemical mining promises economic recovery from these types of deposits. Before it can come of age, however, a much better understanding is needed concerning its chemical and physical aspects.
Citation

APA: Paul W. Johnson  (1967)  Chemical Mining - Theoretical And Practical Aspects

MLA: Paul W. Johnson Chemical Mining - Theoretical And Practical Aspects. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1967.

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