Geocharacterization Of Low Grade Disseminated Gold And Silver Ores With Applications To In Situ Mining (b8b08023-7894-4e56-a0df-3644a99d145e)

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 15
- File Size:
- 3283 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1989
Abstract
The Bureau of Mines is investigating the potential for in situ leach mining "(ISM) of gold and silver mineralization. This preliminary study examined samples from several types of deposits using light optical microscopy and the electron microprobe to characterize the ore and gangue minerals and their microscopic characteristics, including the spacial relations between the target minerals and likely natural fluid channelways. Low grade disseminated deposit types from the western U.S. were found to contain fracture-hosted or matrix-hosted gold and silver minerals, some of which are encapsulated by quartz or pyrite. Geologic features readily observed microscopically include ore and gangue mineral identity, size, and their association with each other and with fractures. Successful ISM application to gold and silver deposits needs this data to: (1) select the proper lixiviant based on chemical reactivity of the host rock, ore, and gangue minerals, (2) determine potential permeability characteristics when designing lixiviant flow patterns, and (3) understand potential problems of the lixiviant reaching encapsulated ore minerals. Careful examination of the geologic characteristics of each ore body is required because of the observed diversity of characteristics in deposits from the same "class" and even within the deposit itself.
Citation
APA:
(1989) Geocharacterization Of Low Grade Disseminated Gold And Silver Ores With Applications To In Situ Mining (b8b08023-7894-4e56-a0df-3644a99d145e)MLA: Geocharacterization Of Low Grade Disseminated Gold And Silver Ores With Applications To In Situ Mining (b8b08023-7894-4e56-a0df-3644a99d145e). Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1989.