The Outline Of The Mamut Copper Mine

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Tsuyoshi Kawahara
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
15
File Size:
914 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1976

Abstract

INTRODUCTION A medium sized mine like the Mamut is not considered a standard size porphyry copper mine. If the infrastructure such as roads, bridges, port facilities, power supply, etc. is inadequate, construction cost per ton of copper produced will be unavoidably high. At the Mamut mine, all efforts had been concentrated to minimize construction cost and overcome an adverse natural environment. Consequently, it was inevitable that the amount of equipment and other arrangements were far from ideal. Some of the construction work was carried out by Japanese contractors, but most was done by local contractors, especially the buildings, installation of machines, roads, and tailings disposal dam, etc. All construction works, including a test run of an 18 000 t/d capacity mill, were completed in September 1975. The total development cost was about 100 million including interest converted into principal during the construction period. HISTORY The Mamut copper mineralization was discovered in mid-1965 by the United Nations' Labuk Valley Project. Following this discovery, further exploratory works, including geochemical survey, pitting, and shallow diamond drilling, which were carried out by the Geological Survey of Malaysia, revealed the existence of a disseminated copper mineralization of porphyry type. In July 1968, I.P. survey and deep-hole diamond drilling were
Citation

APA: Tsuyoshi Kawahara  (1976)  The Outline Of The Mamut Copper Mine

MLA: Tsuyoshi Kawahara The Outline Of The Mamut Copper Mine. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1976.

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