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  • AUSIMM
    Iron ore mining in proximity to a significant Aboriginal heritage rock shelter, Pilbara Region, Western Australia

    By J J. Jiang, B G. Bow

    Atlas Iron Limited’s (Atlas) Abydos Mine has developed its Scarborough open pit proximal to a rock shelter that has been assessed as a significant Aboriginal heritage site by the Traditional Owners of

    Jul 25, 2018

  • AUSIMM
    Olympic Dam mine closure planning process

    By G Hill, D Grant, M Tyler

    Located approximately 570km NNW of Adelaide in South Australia, the Olympic Dam mine (OD) is the world’s fourth largest remaining copper and gold resource and the largest uranium resource. Discovered

    Jul 25, 2018

  • AUSIMM
    The golden thread of waste characterisation from exploration drilling to waste rock placement

    By M Bettison, R Marton, R Wright, M Lowry

    Depending on the geological setting, waste rock from mining can present risks to achieving acceptable closure outcomes. In the Pilbara iron ore mines, the majority of waste rock is geochemically inert

    Jul 25, 2018

  • AUSIMM
    Utilising mine planning to deliver closure landforms through productive movement

    By M Bettison, R Wright, N Taylor

    The primary mine planning focus during early study phases of future mining projects is Life of Asset ore production and grade quality, this will always be the situation. While waste schedule optimisat

    Jul 25, 2018

  • AUSIMM
    Is your mine closure a sustainability failure? Transform your asset and create a self supporting neighbouring community. It’s as easy as ABCD!

    By K Cochrane

    Time and time again history shows us that mine closures are sustainability failures. Mine operators do not know how to turn the mine closure into an asset and communities around the mine do not know h

    Jul 25, 2018

  • AUSIMM
    Extending mine life through application of an in situ recovery approach

    By D J. Robinson, L L. Kuhar

    In-situ recovery (ISR) is accepted and applied across many geographies, and approximately 50% of the world’s uranium is currently extracted by using an ISR method (World Nuclear Association, 2014). T

    Jul 25, 2018

  • AUSIMM
    Planning revegetation for relinquishment

    By S D. Fox, P B. Swart

    Statistics showing that mine rehabilitation is falling behind rates of disturbance continue to be reported in the media. Unfortunately, most reported statistics do not account for the large growth-cyc

    Jul 25, 2018

  • AUSIMM
    Case studies for integrating rehabilitation planning with mine planning in strip mining

    By I Neilsen, A Walker, A Hooper

    Final landform planning in Deswik software was used to determine if integration into the mine plans could achieve better closure outcomes. Using the dump surface outputs from the Deswik Landform and H

    Jul 25, 2018

  • AUSIMM
    A decision framework for comparison of coal void rehabilitation options

    By A Hocking, S Henderson

    Commonwealth of Australia (2016) defines rehabilitation as comprising “the design and construction of landforms as well as the establishment of sustainable ecosystems or alternative vegetation, depend

    Jul 25, 2018

  • AUSIMM
    Risk management for minesite closure planning and execution – start now! Lessons from the closure of the Leigh Creek Coalfield, South Australia

    By A Querzoli, B Williams

    In late 2014 the Flinders Power Management Team was executing business improvement plans to ensure continued electricity generation until 2028 and beyond. Six months later, in June 2015, the Board ann

    Jul 25, 2018

  • AUSIMM
    Balancing the benefits and impacts of future copper demand – climate change and arsenic

    By P J. Bangerter, G D. Corder

    With the societal desire and drive towards low carbon energy sources, there is a growing awareness of the important role that minerals and metals will play with renewable energy technologies. Copper

    Jul 25, 2018

  • AUSIMM
    Sustainable post-closure development – is it achievable?

    By P Scholtz

    Sustainability is one of those fuzzy words like innovation: everybody has an idea what it means, but if one starts asking for concise definitions then it becomes clear that everybody puts their own nu

    Jul 25, 2018

  • AUSIMM
    Assessment of climate risk in the Australian mining industry

    By M Allen

    By its nature, the mining industry is energy and emissions intensive. In the future, the world will still require the outputs of mining but the industry will need to adapt to the low emissions economy

    Jul 25, 2018

  • AUSIMM
    Diversion decision making with an integrated approach to design for operations and mine closure

    By M Rafty, A Markham, S Atkinson

    Australia contains some of the most productive mining areas and is characterised by ancient landscapes and highly variable hydrology. Historical mining of iron ore, coal and other minerals has targete

    Jul 25, 2018

  • AUSIMM
    Using an undisturbed landform to calibrate long-term predictions of the evolution of a rehabilitated landform

    By G R. Hancock, M J. Saynor, J B. C Lowry, K G. Evans, M Narayan

    Tools such as landform evolution models (LEMs) provide a means of predicting how a landform may evolve over extended periods of time. Here, we utilise the CAESAR-Lisflood LEM to assess a proposed reha

    Jul 25, 2018

  • AUSIMM
    Contour banks in spoil rehabilitation – a matter of timing

    By J L. Merritt

    Contour banks and waterways are standard soil conservation measures to assist farmers reduce the impact of gully erosion on sloping cropping land by reducing the slope length to the interval between t

    Jul 25, 2018

  • AUSIMM
    Water treatment in perpetuity – or not?

    By R J. Higgins, M Edraki

    What is the meaning of the Life of a Mine (LOM) if that mine results in a requirement for water treatment in perpetuity? ‘In perpetuity’ is of course a duration with no relationship to a Life-of-Mine

    Jul 25, 2018

  • AUSIMM
    World-class mine planning for a sustainable future in Kazakhstan Mining

    By C Catania

    Mining companies and operations across the globe typically target best practice financial management, along with a focus on economically driven mine plans. Not only is this inherent in running a succe

    Jul 25, 2018

  • AUSIMM
    Mine closure bonds (financial assurances) – the ‘how much?’ conundrum

    By G Byrne, A Bowden

    There is often a difference in opinion about the allocation of risk in the establishment of mine closure bonds or financial assurances. From the State’s perspective, protection is needed to ensure tha

    Jul 25, 2018

  • AUSIMM
    A process-based approach to mine rehabilitation decision making using Bayesian modelling and risk-based principles for dispersive spoil rehabilitation

    By E Thomas, L McCallum, G Dale, J Bennett, K Reardon-Smith, S Raine

    Sustainable closure of coal mines in Australia to a safe, stable, non-polluting condition remains one of the industry’s biggest environmental and social challenges. A significant proportion of mines i

    Jul 25, 2018