Geochemical Investigations Of The Fate Of Abandoned Raffinate In A Proposed In-Stope Solution Mining Project, With Applications To Prediction Of Ground Water Quality

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
G. A. Doyle
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
8
File Size:
428 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1996

Abstract

The White Pine Mine is the second-largest active underground copper mine in the United States, covering an area of approximately 13 square miles in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. The mine operator intends to initiate in-stope solution mining by circulating a solution of mine water, sulfuric acid, and ferric iron through rubblized ore and recovering copper from solution. As planned, the solution would be retired in the mined-out stopes following completion of solution mining activities. Investigations into the fate of the retired solution mining fluid indicate that the solution, through time, will change from an acidic, metal-rich solution to a near-neutral, reducing solution containing much lower concentrations of metals. Investigations include reaction path modeling (EQ3/6) and laboratory and in-mine experiments. The combination of neutralization and reduction will result in precipitation of most metals, primarily as metallic sulfates, chlorides, and sulfides.
Citation

APA: G. A. Doyle  (1996)  Geochemical Investigations Of The Fate Of Abandoned Raffinate In A Proposed In-Stope Solution Mining Project, With Applications To Prediction Of Ground Water Quality

MLA: G. A. Doyle Geochemical Investigations Of The Fate Of Abandoned Raffinate In A Proposed In-Stope Solution Mining Project, With Applications To Prediction Of Ground Water Quality. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1996.

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