Using Tracers To Evaluate The Design Of An In-Situ Leach Cell In Abandoned Mine And Mill Wastes At The Kellogg, Idaho Superfund Site

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Jr. Kirschner
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
13
File Size:
626 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1993

Abstract

An abandoned waste impoundment located within a portion of the Kellogg, Idaho Superfund site constitutes a field research area for studying the feasibility of recovering heavy metals in-situ from unsaturated mine and mill wastes. A prototype in-situ leaching cell has been evaluated using liquid-phase tracer tests and other hydro-geologic tests prior to introducing a lixiviant. The results of the tests suggest that: (1) the cell can be operated excursion-free with a low-density lixiviant at an injection/withdrawal rate of approximately 0.32 l/s; and (2) each hydro-geologic unit is highly heterogeneous at the different scales studied.
Citation

APA: Jr. Kirschner  (1993)  Using Tracers To Evaluate The Design Of An In-Situ Leach Cell In Abandoned Mine And Mill Wastes At The Kellogg, Idaho Superfund Site

MLA: Jr. Kirschner Using Tracers To Evaluate The Design Of An In-Situ Leach Cell In Abandoned Mine And Mill Wastes At The Kellogg, Idaho Superfund Site. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1993.

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