Dewatering, Treatment, And Beneficial Reuse Of Water From The Resolution Copper Mine - Introduction

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
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3
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163 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2011

Abstract

Resolution Copper Mining LLC (RCML) is currently in a Pre-feasibility study evaluating a large and deep copper and molybdenum deposit in the historic mining district east of Superior, Arizona. Work scheduled for the next several years includes dewatering the existing shut-down mine (the Magma Mine) and sinking an exploratory shaft to 2,130 meters (7,000 feet) below the surface. To dewater the Magma Mine and sink the exploratory shaft, RCML must extract and manage about 2 billion gallons of accumulated mine water inventory, as well as about 300 million gallons per year of new inflow. In order to conserve a valuable water resource in a desert environment, RCML worked with the New Magma Irrigation and Drainage District (NMIDD) to provide treated mine water to blend with and supplement the NMIDD?s water supply to approximately 2,000 hectares (5,000 acres) of farmland located east of Phoenix. A 44 km (27-mile) pipeline was needed to convey the treated water. It was essential that a treatment system be used which could reliably meet irrigation water quality goals, produce a non-scaling effluent to maintain pipeline flow capacity, and generate a dense sludge minimizing disposal cost and volume. This paper describes the resulting mine water treatment and recovery system (MWTS) and how the system has performed against objectives.
Citation

APA:  (2011)  Dewatering, Treatment, And Beneficial Reuse Of Water From The Resolution Copper Mine - Introduction

MLA: Dewatering, Treatment, And Beneficial Reuse Of Water From The Resolution Copper Mine - Introduction. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2011.

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