Groundwater Problems At Uranium In Situ Leach Mining Operations In The Powder River Basin, Wyoming ? Introduction

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 10
- File Size:
- 503 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1981
Abstract
The purposes of this presentation are: (1) to discuss the actual as well as potential incidents that have caused and that could cause groundwater contamination at uranium in situ leach mining sites and (2) to discuss remedial actions and solutions that have been or that could be implemented in the future to stop or prevent serious groundwater contamination from in situ leach mining in Wyoming?s Powder River Basin. Open pit, underground, and existing and proposed in situ leach uranium mine sites in the Powder River Basin are shown in Figure 1. In situ leach mining or solution mining for extracting minerals in liquid form is a relatively new addition to the list of conventional mining methods currently used to extract uranium in Wyoming's Powder River Basin. Basically, the in situ leach mining method involves: (1) the injection of a leach solution lixiviant (an acidic or basic oxidizing solution) into a uranium-bearing ore body, via injection wells, to complex the contained uranium, (2) mobilization of the uranium complex from the host material via creation of a soluble complex salt, and (3) surface recovery of the solution bearing the uranium complex via production wells. Uranium is then separated from the leach solution by conventional milling unit operations (ion exchange).
Citation
APA:
(1981) Groundwater Problems At Uranium In Situ Leach Mining Operations In The Powder River Basin, Wyoming ? IntroductionMLA: Groundwater Problems At Uranium In Situ Leach Mining Operations In The Powder River Basin, Wyoming ? Introduction. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1981.