Potential in situ leach exploitation of back-filled Witwatersrand gold mines: parameters and flow-rate calculations from a Zambian Copperbelt analogue

The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
N. Steven
Organization:
The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
4
File Size:
1389 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2009

Abstract

Published parameters from the Mufulira copper in situ leach (ISL) in Zambia are used for order-of-magnitude flow-rate calculations for an envisaged gold ISL in back-filled Witwatersrand stopes. A successful leach operation requires that the porous medium, usually a sand, has a hydraulic conductivity in excess of 5 x10-7m/second (i.e. a permeability >50 millidarcies).Empirical evidence suggests that average linear velocities would be of the order of 60 m/day if the backfill has the grain size of a fine sand. The proposed gold lixiviant would probably be an alkaline or ammonium thiosulphate, not cyanide. The resultant sulphate-rich ground and drainage waters could probably be processed using existing purification techniques to produce gypsum and magnesium/calcium carbonate. Within the next 100 years it is inevitable that solution mining will find widespread application on the Witwatersrand, if not for gold extraction, then certainly for water remediation purposes.
Citation

APA: N. Steven  (2009)  Potential in situ leach exploitation of back-filled Witwatersrand gold mines: parameters and flow-rate calculations from a Zambian Copperbelt analogue

MLA: N. Steven Potential in situ leach exploitation of back-filled Witwatersrand gold mines: parameters and flow-rate calculations from a Zambian Copperbelt analogue. The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2009.

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