Open-Pit and Strip-Mining Systems and Equipment

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 180
- File Size:
- 9490 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1973
Abstract
17.1--CURRENT AND FUTURE STATUS OF SURFACE MINING PAUL T. ALLSMAN AND PAUL F. YOPES 17.1.1--CURRENT The history of surface mining essentially is one of mining coal, copper, iron and aluminum ores, of placer mining gold and tin, and of pits and quarries producing clays, gypsum, phosphate rock, sand, gravel and stone. Table 17-1 is a summary of the estimated world and United States production of crude metallic and non¬metallic ores and coal in 1969. It includes estimates of the quantities produced by surface-mining methods. Two-thirds of the 10 billion tons are mined from the surface, ranging from a third of the coal. 57% of the metallic ores, and nearly all clays, stone, sand and gravel. Production by surface methods in the United States, parallels that of the world with one exception: about 90% of the copper and iron ore is mined from the surface, whereas elsewhere only about half the copper ore is surface mined. In Canada, surface mining of the Athabasca tar-sand deposits is a recent large-scale unique operation. In surface mining of coal and, to a lesser extent, metallic ores, much waste is stripped, but in nonmetallic pits and quarries the ratio between waste and ore usually is small. Assuming that the stripping ratio for surface mining in the
Citation
APA:
(1973) Open-Pit and Strip-Mining Systems and EquipmentMLA: Open-Pit and Strip-Mining Systems and Equipment. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1973.