Geochemistry Of Abandoned Fluids Associated With The Proposed Underground Solution-Mining Project At The White Pine Mine (89e1aa34-dac2-42e3-b380-5043a8991673)

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
G. A. Doyle
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
6
File Size:
392 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1997

Abstract

Until the suspension of conventional operations in 1996, the White Pine Mine was the second-largest active underground copper mine in the United States, underlying an area of approximately 30 km2 (13 sq. miles) in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. The mine operator intends to initiate in-stope solution copper mining by circulating a solution (lixiviant) of mine water, sulfuric acid and ferric iron through rubblized ore. As planned, the solution would be retired in the mined-out stopes following completion of the solution-mining activities. Investigations into the fate of the retired solution indicated that the solution, through time, would change from an acidic, metal-rich solution to a near-neutral, reducing solution containing much lower concentrations of metals. Investigations included reaction-path modeling (EQ3/6) and laboratory and in-mine tests. The combination of neutralization and reduction will result in precipitation of most metals, primarily as metallic sulfates, chlorides and sulfides.
Citation

APA: G. A. Doyle  (1997)  Geochemistry Of Abandoned Fluids Associated With The Proposed Underground Solution-Mining Project At The White Pine Mine (89e1aa34-dac2-42e3-b380-5043a8991673)

MLA: G. A. Doyle Geochemistry Of Abandoned Fluids Associated With The Proposed Underground Solution-Mining Project At The White Pine Mine (89e1aa34-dac2-42e3-b380-5043a8991673). Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1997.

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