Tailings deposition in open pits at Cameco’s in-pit facilities in Saskatchewan - ME Feature Article

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Barry Esford Scott Donald
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
2
File Size:
538 KB
Publication Date:
Jul 1, 2025

Abstract

Cameco Corp. operates uranium mills and tailings management facilities at its Key Lake and Rabbit Lake operations in Northern Saskatchewan, Canada. Development at both mine sites began in the 1970s, with initial tailings deposition occurring within above-ground impoundments, which was common for these facilities at the time. As open pits became available at each site, and mining continued at other orebodies in the area, tailings management shifted to in-pit facilities to meet stakeholder expectations and improve the long-term security and environmental performance of tailings management at these facilities. The in-pit facility at Rabbit Lake (receiving tailings since 1984; Fig. 1), was one of the first (if not the first) engineered in-pit tailings facilities in the world and adopted a full pervious surround design concept with subaerial deposition. Under this concept, permeable sand and coarse rock are placed at the base of the pit, around its perimeter, as well as overlying the tailings at closure to promote regional groundwater flow bypassing the lower-permeability tailings. In contrast, at Key Lake, the in-pit facility (receiving tailings since 1996) adopted a partial pervious surround design concept. Under this concept, permeable materials were again placed at the base of the pit, and partway up the side walls; although for the upper portion of the tailings, the material is placed directly against the natural geologic materials. In the Key Lake case, the natural geologic environment provided the required bypassing of the tailings deposit to achieve the desired environmental performance while the base drain again facilitated pumping during operations to achieve consolidation objectives (Fig. 2). In both the initial design of the facilities, and through more than several decades of operation, it is clear that although in-pit tailings facilities provide common benefits with respect to long-term geotechnical stability, it is critical that their design approach take into consideration site-specific conditions
Citation

APA: Barry Esford Scott Donald  (2025)  Tailings deposition in open pits at Cameco’s in-pit facilities in Saskatchewan - ME Feature Article

MLA: Barry Esford Scott Donald Tailings deposition in open pits at Cameco’s in-pit facilities in Saskatchewan - ME Feature Article. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2025.

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