Environmental Aspects Of Bauxite Mining In Western Australia

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
B. A. Carbon
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
9
File Size:
273 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1984

Abstract

Western Australia is the largest state in Australia with an area one and three quarter times the size of Texas. Most of the State is desert or semi-desert, and only the southwest corner is heavily populated. The State has a population of one and a half million people, and one million of these live in and around the city of Perth. Perth is located on the narrow Swan Coastal Plain and is flanked by the Indian Ocean and the Darling Plateau. The Darling Plateau is an ancient peneplain rising some 300 metres above sea level, and forms an important resource base for the population. The Darling Plateau is old, having been formed some 200 million years ago, and its soils are deeply weathered. The parent materials were granite and gneis which have broken down to form lateritic gravels, overlying dense kaolinitic clays. Some 30 million years ago, in the Tertiary period, a sub - tropical climate prevailed. Appropriate conditions of moisture, temperature and drainage led to extensive laterisation. Some of the laterite contains bauxite of mineable quality. Some 1.9 million hectares of the south-west of Western Australia is covered by eucalypt forests. Threequarters of this forest is referred to as "Jarrah
Citation

APA: B. A. Carbon  (1984)  Environmental Aspects Of Bauxite Mining In Western Australia

MLA: B. A. Carbon Environmental Aspects Of Bauxite Mining In Western Australia. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1984.

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