Treatment of Gold Mill Effluents - The Canadian Experience

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
James S. Scott
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
17
File Size:
498 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1987

Abstract

Effluents discharged from gold mills, and more recently from heap leaching operations, pose significant hazards to the environment if not properly managed prior to discharge. This paper describes the nature of wastewaters which must be treated, the treatment processes being applied in Canada and the capabilities of these methods in removing cyanide and metals. As a result of past practice the most common method of reducing cyanide in gold mill effluents remains that of natural degradation in tailings ponds. This method has proven capable of producing high quality effluents where large ponds and sufficiently long water retention times can be provided, but at many mines this has not been the case. Since 1981, as a result of these limitations there has been a strong move in Canada to chemically-based effluent treatment plants, particularly as additional processes became available. Canadian gold mills have become leaders in the use of chemical processes to remove cyanide, in terms of the variety of such processes in operation (five in total), the number of plant installations and the number of processes developed in this country. The hydrogen peroxide and Inco SO2-air processes, in that order, are being applied most widely. Alkaline chlorination, the initial process to be used fairly extensively has been almost totally replaced by the two methods mentioned above. Since a number of effective methods are now available for the treatment of gold mill effluents, the selection of a process for application at a specific mill requires careful consideration of:
Citation

APA: James S. Scott  (1987)  Treatment of Gold Mill Effluents - The Canadian Experience

MLA: James S. Scott Treatment of Gold Mill Effluents - The Canadian Experience. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1987.

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