Structural Geology of the Emily Ann Nickel Deposit and Implications for the Mining Process

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
P Hodkiewicz D Barrett R Buerger
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
16
File Size:
3561 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2003

Abstract

The Emily Ann nickel mine is owned and operated by LionOre Mining International Ltd. The deposit was discovered during 1997 and is blind, concealed beneath 25 m of transported cover and a further 100 m of unmineralised Archaean felsic rocks. Nickel sulfide mineralisation is hosted predominantly in strongly deformed, altered and metamorphosed Archaean komatiitic ultramafic rocks. Subordinate felsic-hosted, remobilised mineralisation is also present. Mining of ore commenced during late-2001. Since the early days of exploration drilling, through feasibility delineation drilling and subsequent mining, a geological model involving thrusting and folding of a komatiitic-hosted nickel sulfide deposit has been an evolving theme. Development of appropriate mine geology procedures, including detailed mapping, significantly increased the confidence of mine-site geology and engineering staff in the geological model and improved operational efficiencies during start-up. This also allowed the engineering and mining team to develop a tolerance for the large fluctuations in daily production grade, with an understanding that budgeted production targets, on a level-by-level basis, were achievable. This paper describes the development of the current interpretation of the deposit and emphasises the importance of a sound understanding of deposit geology. The direct benefits at Emily Ann included improvements in drill targeting, resource estimation and mine planning.
Citation

APA: P Hodkiewicz D Barrett R Buerger  (2003)  Structural Geology of the Emily Ann Nickel Deposit and Implications for the Mining Process

MLA: P Hodkiewicz D Barrett R Buerger Structural Geology of the Emily Ann Nickel Deposit and Implications for the Mining Process. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2003.

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