Optimizing Cyanidation Parameters For Processing Of Blended Fort Knox And True North Ores At The Fort Knox Mine

The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
John Hollow
Organization:
The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Pages:
14
File Size:
457 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2003

Abstract

The Fort Knox Mine is an open-pit operation, located in Alaska, which started commercial production in March 1997. A conventional Mill processes 38,000 tpd of a low grade (1.0 g/t Au) free milling gold ore with a low sulphide component (below 1%). Gold production (11% from gravity and 89% from cyanidation) exceeds 400,000 ounces per year. Short retention time (20h), low temperature (7oC) and low grade make high leaching kinetics critical for the performance of the process. In April 2001, the treatment of True North ore, which represented 14.4% of the mill throughput and contained more sulphide in the form of pyrite, arsenopyrite and stibnite, resulted in a substantial drop in the average gold extraction from 87% to 72.6%. Laboratory investigations indicated that the addition of lead nitrate increased gold extraction to 91.7%. Further investigations were initiated to determine the leaching parameters and the nature of the problem. Subsequently, a lead nitrate addition scheme was implemented at the Fort Knox Mill that resulted in 2002 gold production being in excess of 31,000 ounces higher than that estimated for the non-lead nitrate reagent scheme. This paper presents the results of laboratory investigations and modifications in plant operating practices.
Citation

APA: John Hollow  (2003)  Optimizing Cyanidation Parameters For Processing Of Blended Fort Knox And True North Ores At The Fort Knox Mine

MLA: John Hollow Optimizing Cyanidation Parameters For Processing Of Blended Fort Knox And True North Ores At The Fort Knox Mine. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 2003.

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