Gold Particle Characteristics in Narrow Vein Deposits - Implications for Evaluation and Metallurgy

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Y Xie I M. Platten
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
14
File Size:
6491 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2008

Abstract

Narrow vein gold mineralisation generally contains both fine (<100 ¦m) and coarse (>100 ¦m) gold particles. The in situ size and shape, deportment, distribution and abundance of the particles controls deposit sampling characteristics, grade distribution and metallurgical properties. Particles can range from individual disseminated grains, clusters of particles and masses above 1 cm in size. At each end of the coarse-gold to fine-gold spectrum, the samplability of a deposit ranges from relatively simple for fine-grained disseminated gold particles, through to extremely difficult for very coarse particles. Deposits generally show a background grade of mineralisation dominated by disseminated fine gold particles. Drilling will resolve the background grade well, though is likely to considerably understate the grade related to the coarser gold particles. Gold mineralogy has a significant impact on metallurgy, with key factors affecting recovery being particle size, deportment, liberation parameters and silver content of gold minerals. For coarse gold particles the focus should be on liberation and the early removal of the particles from the mill circuit by gravity concentrators and gold traps. Finer particles will require more grinding to liberate prior to flotation or cyanide extraction. The determination of gold particle sizing is thus required to minimise evaluation and geometallurgical uncertainty and lower project risk.
Citation

APA: Y Xie I M. Platten  (2008)  Gold Particle Characteristics in Narrow Vein Deposits - Implications for Evaluation and Metallurgy

MLA: Y Xie I M. Platten Gold Particle Characteristics in Narrow Vein Deposits - Implications for Evaluation and Metallurgy. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2008.

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