Solid Waste Disposal Site Selection For The McLaughlin Gold Project In Northern California

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 19
- File Size:
- 445 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1983
Abstract
Wastes in various forms have always been a part of mining, and management of mine waste has evolved from the early days of "push it over the side and down the creek" to today's highly engineered waste facilities. Changes have been brought about not only by technological advances in the ?3M?s? - mining, milling, and metallurgy - but also by environmental awareness and changing social values that have been manifested in an ever-growing maze of regulations. This is a dynamic era, and the debate goes on. So it is that planners have to anticipate permit and regulatory requirements in the site-selection process along with the traditional criteria. The McLaughlin gold project is an example of how one company, Homestake, has met this planning challenge. In August of 1980, Homestake Mining Company announced a major gold discovery in northern California known as the McLaughlin Project. The property is approximately 80 air miles northeast of San Francisco near the junction of Lake, Napa, and Yolo Counties. This is an area where mercury has been mined off and on for over 100 years; gold has never been mined in the area. The gold is microscopic and finely dispersed in a complex geologic setting. Reserves are estimated at approximately 20 million tons at a grade of approximately 0.16 ounces per ton.
Citation
APA:
(1983) Solid Waste Disposal Site Selection For The McLaughlin Gold Project In Northern CaliforniaMLA: Solid Waste Disposal Site Selection For The McLaughlin Gold Project In Northern California. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1983.