Geotechnical Design Considerations For The Proposed Oyu Tolgoi Open Pits, Southern Mongolia

The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Allan Haines Peter Voulgaris Diane Walker Ian de Bruyn
Organization:
The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
22
File Size:
7222 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2006

Abstract

The Oyu Tolgoi porphyry gold and copper project is located in the south Gobi region of Mongolia. The Ivanhoe Mines project has the potential to become a long-life copper and gold producer that could rank among the largest in the world. There are five deposits which cover a strike length in excess of 6.5 km, from south to north they are named South Oyu, Southwest Oyu, Central Oyu, Hugo South and Hugo North. The first three, collectively known as the Southern Oyu deposits, are planned to be mined by open pits, whilst extraction of the deeper Hugo deposits is planned using block caving techniques. The pits will have diameters of approximately 1000m and a maximum depth of 550m. The geological environment consists of a sequence of porphyritic augite basalt, dacitic tuffs and sedimentary rocks that have been intruded by several generations of porphyritic quartz monzodiorite and numerous post mineralization dykes. Several major faults cut through the southern deposits juxtaposing the relative position of the stratigraphy. The geotechnical investigation for the Oyu Tolgoi Open Pits was conducted in three distinct phases of increasing complexity: scoping study; advanced scoping study and feasibility study. Each phase consisted of data collection, interpretation and analysis designed to progressively develop 3D geotechnical domaining for the empirical, structural and numerical evaluations. The development of the geotechnical design parameters for these green fields open pits posed many technical challenges, brought about by the conditions associated with a lithologically and structurally complex environment. The design work focused on the optimization of the pit geometry to conform to equipment selection and blasting characteristics. Limiting bench stack heights were derived from the influence of major structures. The overall slope angles in each pit sector were developed around the requirement for haulage ramps and geotechnical berms. This paper describes each of these aspects and the methodology used to address the integration of the geotechnical characteristics with the mining environment.
Citation

APA: Allan Haines Peter Voulgaris Diane Walker Ian de Bruyn  (2006)  Geotechnical Design Considerations For The Proposed Oyu Tolgoi Open Pits, Southern Mongolia

MLA: Allan Haines Peter Voulgaris Diane Walker Ian de Bruyn Geotechnical Design Considerations For The Proposed Oyu Tolgoi Open Pits, Southern Mongolia. The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2006.

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