The evolution and future of overburden dewatering at Highland Valley Copper (ccb710cb-32e0-4645-ac2a-8a63f54a56a6)

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
P. A. Witt
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
7
File Size:
2777 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2005

Abstract

"Highland Valley Copper is a conventional truck-shovel mining and flotation concentrator operation located 75 km southwest of Kamloops, British Columbia (Fig. 1).The ore is situated within a porphyry copper deposit and is mined at a rate of 135,000 mt/day from two separate open pits. The nearby mill produces concentrates containing 375 million pounds of copper and 5 million pounds of molybdenum metal yearly. In the Valley pit, head grades are roughly 0.40% Cu at a 0.23% Cu equivalent cut-off. The Valley pit strip ratio currently sits at 0.55:1 with waste quantities made up of separate rock and unconsolidated overburden units. From the mill, concentrates are trucked to nearby Ashcroft and then hauled by rail to ocean port facilities in Vancouver. The mine employs 950 people and is planned to operate until 2009. The operation is a partnership between Teck Cominco (63.9%), BHP Billiton (33.6%), and others (2.5%). Management is shared by the two principal owners and directed by a management committee."
Citation

APA: P. A. Witt  (2005)  The evolution and future of overburden dewatering at Highland Valley Copper (ccb710cb-32e0-4645-ac2a-8a63f54a56a6)

MLA: P. A. Witt The evolution and future of overburden dewatering at Highland Valley Copper (ccb710cb-32e0-4645-ac2a-8a63f54a56a6). Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2005.

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