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In situ leach

In-situ leaching (ISL), also called in-situ recovery (ISR) or solution mining, is a mining process used to recover minerals such as copper and uranium through boreholes drilled into a deposit, in situ. In situ leach works by artificially dissolving minerals occurring naturally in a solid state. For recovery of material occurring naturally in solution, see: Brine mining.

Remains of uranium in-situ leaching in Stráž pod Ralskem, Czech Republic

The process initially involves the drilling of holes into the ore deposit. Explosive or pathways in the deposit for solution to penetrate. Leaching solution is pumped into the deposit where it makes contact with the ore. The solution bearing the dissolved ore content is then pumped to the surface and processed. This process allows the extraction of metals and salts from an ore body without the need for conventional mining involving drill-and-blast, open-cut or underground mining.

Process edit

In-situ leach mining involves pumping of a lixiviant into the ore body via a borehole, which circulates through the porous rock dissolving the ore and is extracted via a second borehole.

The lixiviant varies according to the ore deposit: for salt deposits the leachate can be fresh water into which salts can readily dissolve. For copper, acids are generally needed to enhance solubility of the ore minerals within the solution. For uranium ores, the lixiviant may be acid or sodium bicarbonate.

Minerals edit

Potash and soluble salts edit

In-situ leach is widely used to extract deposits of water-soluble salts such as potash (sylvite and carnallite), rock salt (halite), sodium chloride, and sodium sulfate. It has been used in the US state of Colorado to extract nahcolite (sodium bicarbonate).[1] In-situ leaching is often used for deposits that are too deep, or beds that are too thin, for conventional Underground Mining.

Uranium edit

 
Diagram of in-situ leaching for uranium (US NRC)

In-situ leach for uranium has expanded rapidly since the 1990s, and is now the predominant method for mining uranium, accounting for 45 percent of the uranium mined worldwide in 2012.[2]

Solutions used to dissolve uranium ore are either acid (sulfuric acid or less commonly nitric acid) or carbonate (sodium bicarbonate, ammonium carbonate, or dissolved carbon dioxide). Dissolved oxygen is sometimes added to the water to mobilize the uranium. ISL of uranium ores started in the United States and the Soviet Union in the early 1960s. The first uranium ISL in the US was in the Shirley Basin in the state of Wyoming, which operated from 1961-1970 using sulfuric acid. Since 1970, all commercial-scale ISL mines in the US have used carbonate solutions.[3] ISL mining in Australia uses acid solutions.[4]

 
Ion exchange resin beads

In-situ recovery involves the extraction of uranium-bearing water (grading as low as .05% U3O8). The extracted uranium solution is then filtered through resin beads. Through an ion exchange process, the resin beads attract uranium from the solution. Uranium loaded resins are then transported to a processing plant, where U3O8 is separated from the resin beads and yellowcake is produced. The resin beads can then be returned to the ion exchange facility where they are reused.

At the end of 2008 there were four[5] in-situ leaching uranium mines operating in the United States, operated by Cameco, Mestena and Uranium Resources, Inc., all using sodium bicarbonate. ISL produces 90% of the uranium mined in the US. In 2010, Uranium Energy Corporation began in-situ leach operations at their Palangana project in Duval County, Texas. In July 2012 Cameco delayed development of their Kintyre project, due to challenging project economics based on $45.00 U3O8. One ISR reclamation project was also in operation as of 2009.[6]

Significant ISL mines are operating in Kazakhstan and Australia. The Beverley uranium mine in Australia uses in-situ leaching. ISL mining accounted for 41% of the world's uranium production in 2010.[7]

 
A drum of yellowcake

Examples of in-situ uranium mines include:

  • The Beverley Uranium Mine, South Australia, is an operating ISL uranium mine and Australia's first such mine.
  • The Honeymoon Uranium Mine, South Australia, opened in 2011 and is Australia's second ISL uranium mine.
  • Crow Butte (operating), Smith Ranch-Highland (operating), Christensen Ranch (reclamation), Irigaray (reclamation), Churchrock (proposed), Crownpoint (proposed), Alta Mesa (operating), Hobson (standby), La Palangana (operating), Kingsville Dome (operating), Rosita (standby) and Vasquez (restoration) are ISL uranium operations in the United States.
  • In 2010 Uranium Energy Corp. began an ISL mining operation in the Palangana deposit in Duval County, Texas. The ion exchange facility at Palangana trucks uranium-loaded resin beads to the company's Hobson processing plant, where yellowcake is produced. Uranium Energy Corp. has three additional South Texas deposits permitted or in development.[8]

Rhenium edit

There are technologies for the associated extraction of rhenium from productive solutions of underground leaching of uranium ores.[9]

Copper edit

In-situ leaching of copper was done by the Chinese by 907 AD, and perhaps as early as 177 BC.[3] Copper is usually leached using acid (sulfuric acid or hydrochloric acid), then recovered from solution by solvent extraction electrowinning (SX-EW) or by chemical precipitation.

Ores most amenable to leaching include the copper carbonates malachite and azurite, the oxide tenorite, and the silicate chrysocolla. Other copper minerals, such as the oxide cuprite and the sulfide chalcocite may require addition of oxidizing agents such as ferric sulfate and oxygen to the leachate before the minerals are dissolved. The ores with the highest sulfide contents, such as bornite and chalcopyrite will require more oxidants and will dissolve more slowly. Sometimes oxidation is sped up by the bacteria Thiobacillus ferrooxidans, which feeds on sulfide compounds.

Copper ISL is often done by stope leaching, in which broken low-grade ore is leached in a current or former conventional underground mine. The leaching may take place in backfilled stopes or caved areas. In 1994, stope leaching of copper was reported at 16 mines in the US.

 
Recovery well at former San Manuel operation.

At the San Manuel Mine[10] in the US state of Arizona, ISL was initially used by collecting the resultant solution underground but in 1995 this was converted to a well-to-well recovery method which was the first large scale implementation of that method. This well-to-well method has been proposed for other copper deposits in Arizona.

Gold edit

In-situ leaching has not been used on a commercial scale for gold mining. A three-year pilot program was undertaken in the 1970s to in-situ leach gold ore at the Ajax mine in the Cripple Creek district in the US, using a chloride and iodide solution. After obtaining poor results, perhaps because of the complex telluride ore, the test was halted.[11]

Environmental concerns edit

According to the World Nuclear Organization:

In the USA legislation requires that the water quality in the effected aquifer be restored so as to enable its pre-mining use. Usually this is potable water or stock water (usually less than 500 ppm total dissolved solids), and while not all chemical characteristics can be returned to those pre-mining, the water must be usable for the same purposes as before. Often it needs to be treated by reverse osmosis, giving rise to a problem in disposing of the concentrated brine stream from this.

The usual radiation safeguards are applied at an ISL Uranium mining operation, despite the fact that most of the orebody's radioactivity remains well underground and there is hence minimal increase in radon release and no ore dust. Employees are monitored for alpha radiation contamination and personal dosimeters are worn to measure exposure to gamma radiation. Routine monitoring of air, dust and surface contamination are undertaken.[12]

The advantages of this technology are:

  • Reduced hazards for the employees from accidents, dust, and radiation,
  • Low cost, no need for large uranium mill tailings deposits.

After termination of an in-situ leaching operation, the waste slurries produced must be safely disposed, and the aquifer, contaminated from the leaching activities, must be restored. Groundwater restoration is a very tedious process that is not yet fully understood.[citation needed]

The best results have been obtained with the following treatment scheme, consisting of a series of different steps:[13][14]

  • Phase 1: Pumping of contaminated water: the injection of the leaching solution is stopped and the contaminated liquid is pumped from the leaching zone. Subsequently, clean groundwater flows in from outside of the leaching zone.
  • Phase 2: as 1, but with treatment of the pumped liquid (by reverse osmosis) and re-injection into the former leaching zone. This scheme results in circulation of the liquid.
  • Phase 3: as 2, with the addition of a reducing chemical (for example hydrogen sulfide (H2S) or sodium sulfide (Na2S). This causes the chemical precipitation and thus immobilization of major contaminants.
  • Phase 4: Circulation of the liquid by pumping and re- injection, to obtain uniform conditions in the whole former leaching zone.

But, even with this treatment scheme, various problems remain unresolved:[citation needed]

  • Contaminants that are mobile under chemically reducing conditions, such as radium, cannot be controlled.
  • If chemically reducing conditions are later disturbed for any reasons, the precipitated contaminants are re-mobilized.
  • The restoration process takes very long periods of time, not all parameters can be lowered appropriately.

Most restoration experiments reported refer to the alkaline leaching scheme, since this scheme is the only one used in Western world commercial in-situ operations. Therefore, nearly no experience exists with groundwater restoration after acid in- situ leaching, the scheme that was applied in most instances in Eastern Europe. The only Western in-situ leaching site restored after sulfuric acid leaching so far, is the small pilot scale facility Nine Mile Lake near Casper, Wyoming (USA). The results can therefore not simply be transferred to production scale facilities. The restoration scheme applied included the first two steps mentioned above. It turned out that a water volume of more than 20 times the pore volume of the leaching zone had to be pumped, and still several parameters did not reach background levels. Moreover, the restoration required about the same time as used for the leaching period. [15][16]

In USA, the Pawnee, Lamprecht, and Zamzow ISL Sites in Texas were restored using steps 1 and 2 of the above listed treatment scheme.[17] Relaxed groundwater restoration standards have been granted at these and other sites, since the restoration criteria could not be met.[citation needed]

A study published by the U.S. Geological Survey in 2009 found that "To date, no remediation of an ISR operation in the United States has successfully returned the aquifer to baseline conditions."[18]

Baseline conditions include commercial quantities of radioactive U3O8. Efficient in-situ recovery reduces U3O8 values of the aquifer. Speaking at an EPA Region 8 workshop, on September 29, 2010, Ardyth Simmons, PhD, Los Alamos National Laboratory (Los Alamos, NM) on the subject "Establishing Baseline and Comparison to Restoration Values at Uranium In-Situ Recovery Sites" stated "These results indicated that it may be unrealistic for ISR operations to restore aquifers to the mean, because in some cases, this means that there would have to be less uranium present than there was pre-mining. Pursuing more conservative concentrations results in a considerable amount of water usage, and many of these aquifers were not suitable for drinking water before mining initiated."[19]

The EPA is considering the need to update the environmental protection standards for uranium mining because current regulations, promulgated in response to the Uranium Mill Tailings Radiation Control Act of 1978, do not address the relatively recent process of in-situ leaching (ISL) of uranium from underground ore bodies. In a February, 2012 letter the EPA states, "Because the ISL process affects groundwater quality, the EPA’s Office of Radiation and Indoor Air requested advice from the Science Advisory Board (SAB) on issues related to design and implementation of groundwater monitoring at ISL mining sites."

The SAB makes recommendations concerning monitoring to characterize baseline groundwater quality prior to the start of mining operations, monitoring to detect any leachate excursions during mining, and monitoring to determine when groundwater quality has stabilized after mining operations have been completed. The SAB also reviews the advantages and disadvantages of alternative statistical techniques to determine whether post-operational groundwater quality has returned to near pre-mining conditions and whether mine operation can be predicted not to adversely impact groundwater quality after site closure acceptance. [20]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Hardy, M.; Ramey, M.; Yates, C.; Nielsen, K. (2003). (PDF). 2003 SME Annual Meeting. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-09-28.
  2. ^ Uranium 2014, International Atomic Energy Agency/OCED Nuclear Energy Agency, 2014.
  3. ^ a b Mudd, Gavin M. (January 2000). (PDF). Tailings & Mine Waste '00. Fort Collins, CO, USA. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-09-13.
  4. ^ HONEYMOON PROJECT
  5. ^ "Domestic Uranium Production Report". Energy Information Administration.
  6. ^ . Domestic Uranium Production Report. Energy Information Administration. Archived from the original on 2012-05-24. Retrieved September 19, 2012.
  7. ^ "Continued growth in uranium production". World Nuclear News. World Nuclear Association. 2011-05-03. Retrieved 2012-10-16.
  8. ^ "Uranium production begins," Mining Engineering, December 2010.
  9. ^ Rudenko, A. A.; Troshkina, I. D.; Danileyko, V. V.; Barabanov, O. S.; Vatsura, F. Ya (2021-10-13). "Prospects for selective-and-advanced recovery of rhenium from pregnant solutions of in-situ leaching of uranium ores at Dobrovolnoye deposit". Gornye Nauki I Tekhnologii = Mining Science and Technology (Russia). 6 (3): 158–169. doi:10.17073/2500-0632-2021-3-158-169. ISSN 2500-0632. S2CID 241476783.
  10. ^ Sutton, Gary (2019). "Reconciling Mineral Reserves at the well-to-well in-situ copper leaching operation at San Manuel Mine, Arizona, USA". CIM Geology. 10 3Q2019: 133–141.
  11. ^ Peter G. Chamberlain and Michael G. Pojar (1984) Gold and silver leaching practices in the United States, US Bureau of Mines, Information Circular 8969, p.24.
  12. ^ In Situ Leach (ISL) Mining of Uranium, retrieved 2012-10-12
  13. ^ "Schmidt,C: Groundwater Restoration and Stabilization at the Ruth-ISL Test Site in Wyoming, USA. In: In Situ Leaching of Uranium - Technical, Environmental and Economic Aspects, Proceedings of a Technical Committee Meeting, IAEA- TECDOC-492, Vienna 1989, p.97-126", Vienna, 492: 97–126, 1989
  14. ^ Catchpole,Glenn; Kirchner,Gerhard: Restoration of Groundwater Contaminated by Alkaline In-Situ Leach of Uranium Mining. In: Merkel,B et al. (Ed.): Uranium Mining and Hydrogeology, GeoCongress 1, Köln 1995, p.81-89, 1995, pp. 81–89
  15. ^ Nigbor,Michael T; Engelmann,William H; Tweeton,Daryl R: Case History of a Pilot-Scale Acidic In Situ Uranium Leaching Experiment. United States Department of the Interior, Bureau of Mines Report of Investigations RI-8652, Washington D.C., 1982, 81 p, 1982, p. 81
  16. ^ Engelmann,W H; Phillips,P E; Tweeton,D R; Loest,K W;Nigbor,M T: Restoration of Groundwater Quality Following Pilot-Scale Acidic In-Situ Uranium Leaching at Nine- Mile Lake Site Near Casper, Wyoming. In: Society of Petroleum Engineers Journal, June 1982, p.382-398, 1982, pp. 382–398
  17. ^ Mays,W M: Restoration of Groundwater at Three In- Situ Uranium Mines in Texas. In: IAEA (Ed.), Uranium in situ leaching. Proceedings of a Technical Committee Meeting held in Vienna, 5-8 October 1992, IAEA-TECDOC-720, Vienna 1993, p.191- 215, 1993, pp. 191–215
  18. ^ J.K. Otton, S. Hall: In-situ recovery uranium mining in the United States: Overview of production and remediation issues, International Symposium on Uranium Raw Material for the Nuclear Fuel Cycle: Exploration, Mining, Production, Supply and Demand, Economics and Environmental Issues, 2009
  19. ^ (PDF). 2010-09-29. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-07-28. Retrieved 2012-10-16.
  20. ^ "Advisory on EPA's Draft Technical Report entitled Considerations Related to Post- Closure Monitoring of Uranium In-Situ Leach/In-Situ Recovery (ISL/ISR) Sites". Retrieved 2012-10-13.

External links edit

    situ, leach, situ, leaching, also, called, situ, recovery, solution, mining, mining, process, used, recover, minerals, such, copper, uranium, through, boreholes, drilled, into, deposit, situ, works, artificially, dissolving, minerals, occurring, naturally, sol. In situ leaching ISL also called in situ recovery ISR or solution mining is a mining process used to recover minerals such as copper and uranium through boreholes drilled into a deposit in situ In situ leach works by artificially dissolving minerals occurring naturally in a solid state For recovery of material occurring naturally in solution see Brine mining Remains of uranium in situ leaching in Straz pod Ralskem Czech RepublicThe process initially involves the drilling of holes into the ore deposit Explosive or pathways in the deposit for solution to penetrate Leaching solution is pumped into the deposit where it makes contact with the ore The solution bearing the dissolved ore content is then pumped to the surface and processed This process allows the extraction of metals and salts from an ore body without the need for conventional mining involving drill and blast open cut or underground mining Contents 1 Process 2 Minerals 2 1 Potash and soluble salts 2 2 Uranium 2 3 Rhenium 2 4 Copper 2 5 Gold 3 Environmental concerns 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksProcess editIn situ leach mining involves pumping of a lixiviant into the ore body via a borehole which circulates through the porous rock dissolving the ore and is extracted via a second borehole The lixiviant varies according to the ore deposit for salt deposits the leachate can be fresh water into which salts can readily dissolve For copper acids are generally needed to enhance solubility of the ore minerals within the solution For uranium ores the lixiviant may be acid or sodium bicarbonate Minerals editPotash and soluble salts edit In situ leach is widely used to extract deposits of water soluble salts such as potash sylvite and carnallite rock salt halite sodium chloride and sodium sulfate It has been used in the US state of Colorado to extract nahcolite sodium bicarbonate 1 In situ leaching is often used for deposits that are too deep or beds that are too thin for conventional Underground Mining Uranium edit See also Uranium mining in the United States nbsp Diagram of in situ leaching for uranium US NRC In situ leach for uranium has expanded rapidly since the 1990s and is now the predominant method for mining uranium accounting for 45 percent of the uranium mined worldwide in 2012 2 Solutions used to dissolve uranium ore are either acid sulfuric acid or less commonly nitric acid or carbonate sodium bicarbonate ammonium carbonate or dissolved carbon dioxide Dissolved oxygen is sometimes added to the water to mobilize the uranium ISL of uranium ores started in the United States and the Soviet Union in the early 1960s The first uranium ISL in the US was in the Shirley Basin in the state of Wyoming which operated from 1961 1970 using sulfuric acid Since 1970 all commercial scale ISL mines in the US have used carbonate solutions 3 ISL mining in Australia uses acid solutions 4 nbsp Ion exchange resin beadsIn situ recovery involves the extraction of uranium bearing water grading as low as 05 U3O8 The extracted uranium solution is then filtered through resin beads Through an ion exchange process the resin beads attract uranium from the solution Uranium loaded resins are then transported to a processing plant where U3O8 is separated from the resin beads and yellowcake is produced The resin beads can then be returned to the ion exchange facility where they are reused At the end of 2008 there were four 5 in situ leaching uranium mines operating in the United States operated by Cameco Mestena and Uranium Resources Inc all using sodium bicarbonate ISL produces 90 of the uranium mined in the US In 2010 Uranium Energy Corporation began in situ leach operations at their Palangana project in Duval County Texas In July 2012 Cameco delayed development of their Kintyre project due to challenging project economics based on 45 00 U3O8 One ISR reclamation project was also in operation as of 2009 6 Significant ISL mines are operating in Kazakhstan and Australia The Beverley uranium mine in Australia uses in situ leaching ISL mining accounted for 41 of the world s uranium production in 2010 7 nbsp A drum of yellowcakeExamples of in situ uranium mines include The Beverley Uranium Mine South Australia is an operating ISL uranium mine and Australia s first such mine The Honeymoon Uranium Mine South Australia opened in 2011 and is Australia s second ISL uranium mine Crow Butte operating Smith Ranch Highland operating Christensen Ranch reclamation Irigaray reclamation Churchrock proposed Crownpoint proposed Alta Mesa operating Hobson standby La Palangana operating Kingsville Dome operating Rosita standby and Vasquez restoration are ISL uranium operations in the United States In 2010 Uranium Energy Corp began an ISL mining operation in the Palangana deposit in Duval County Texas The ion exchange facility at Palangana trucks uranium loaded resin beads to the company s Hobson processing plant where yellowcake is produced Uranium Energy Corp has three additional South Texas deposits permitted or in development 8 Rhenium edit There are technologies for the associated extraction of rhenium from productive solutions of underground leaching of uranium ores 9 Copper edit See also copper extraction In situ leaching of copper was done by the Chinese by 907 AD and perhaps as early as 177 BC 3 Copper is usually leached using acid sulfuric acid or hydrochloric acid then recovered from solution by solvent extraction electrowinning SX EW or by chemical precipitation Ores most amenable to leaching include the copper carbonates malachite and azurite the oxide tenorite and the silicate chrysocolla Other copper minerals such as the oxide cuprite and the sulfide chalcocite may require addition of oxidizing agents such as ferric sulfate and oxygen to the leachate before the minerals are dissolved The ores with the highest sulfide contents such as bornite and chalcopyrite will require more oxidants and will dissolve more slowly Sometimes oxidation is sped up by the bacteria Thiobacillus ferrooxidans which feeds on sulfide compounds Copper ISL is often done by stope leaching in which broken low grade ore is leached in a current or former conventional underground mine The leaching may take place in backfilled stopes or caved areas In 1994 stope leaching of copper was reported at 16 mines in the US nbsp Recovery well at former San Manuel operation At the San Manuel Mine 10 in the US state of Arizona ISL was initially used by collecting the resultant solution underground but in 1995 this was converted to a well to well recovery method which was the first large scale implementation of that method This well to well method has been proposed for other copper deposits in Arizona Gold edit In situ leaching has not been used on a commercial scale for gold mining A three year pilot program was undertaken in the 1970s to in situ leach gold ore at the Ajax mine in the Cripple Creek district in the US using a chloride and iodide solution After obtaining poor results perhaps because of the complex telluride ore the test was halted 11 Environmental concerns editAccording to the World Nuclear Organization In the USA legislation requires that the water quality in the effected aquifer be restored so as to enable its pre mining use Usually this is potable water or stock water usually less than 500 ppm total dissolved solids and while not all chemical characteristics can be returned to those pre mining the water must be usable for the same purposes as before Often it needs to be treated by reverse osmosis giving rise to a problem in disposing of the concentrated brine stream from this The usual radiation safeguards are applied at an ISL Uranium mining operation despite the fact that most of the orebody s radioactivity remains well underground and there is hence minimal increase in radon release and no ore dust Employees are monitored for alpha radiation contamination and personal dosimeters are worn to measure exposure to gamma radiation Routine monitoring of air dust and surface contamination are undertaken 12 The advantages of this technology are Reduced hazards for the employees from accidents dust and radiation Low cost no need for large uranium mill tailings deposits After termination of an in situ leaching operation the waste slurries produced must be safely disposed and the aquifer contaminated from the leaching activities must be restored Groundwater restoration is a very tedious process that is not yet fully understood citation needed The best results have been obtained with the following treatment scheme consisting of a series of different steps 13 14 Phase 1 Pumping of contaminated water the injection of the leaching solution is stopped and the contaminated liquid is pumped from the leaching zone Subsequently clean groundwater flows in from outside of the leaching zone Phase 2 as 1 but with treatment of the pumped liquid by reverse osmosis and re injection into the former leaching zone This scheme results in circulation of the liquid Phase 3 as 2 with the addition of a reducing chemical for example hydrogen sulfide H2S or sodium sulfide Na2S This causes the chemical precipitation and thus immobilization of major contaminants Phase 4 Circulation of the liquid by pumping and re injection to obtain uniform conditions in the whole former leaching zone But even with this treatment scheme various problems remain unresolved citation needed Contaminants that are mobile under chemically reducing conditions such as radium cannot be controlled If chemically reducing conditions are later disturbed for any reasons the precipitated contaminants are re mobilized The restoration process takes very long periods of time not all parameters can be lowered appropriately Most restoration experiments reported refer to the alkaline leaching scheme since this scheme is the only one used in Western world commercial in situ operations Therefore nearly no experience exists with groundwater restoration after acid in situ leaching the scheme that was applied in most instances in Eastern Europe The only Western in situ leaching site restored after sulfuric acid leaching so far is the small pilot scale facility Nine Mile Lake near Casper Wyoming USA The results can therefore not simply be transferred to production scale facilities The restoration scheme applied included the first two steps mentioned above It turned out that a water volume of more than 20 times the pore volume of the leaching zone had to be pumped and still several parameters did not reach background levels Moreover the restoration required about the same time as used for the leaching period 15 16 In USA the Pawnee Lamprecht and Zamzow ISL Sites in Texas were restored using steps 1 and 2 of the above listed treatment scheme 17 Relaxed groundwater restoration standards have been granted at these and other sites since the restoration criteria could not be met citation needed A study published by the U S Geological Survey in 2009 found that To date no remediation of an ISR operation in the United States has successfully returned the aquifer to baseline conditions 18 Baseline conditions include commercial quantities of radioactive U3O8 Efficient in situ recovery reduces U3O8 values of the aquifer Speaking at an EPA Region 8 workshop on September 29 2010 Ardyth Simmons PhD Los Alamos National Laboratory Los Alamos NM on the subject Establishing Baseline and Comparison to Restoration Values at Uranium In Situ Recovery Sites stated These results indicated that it may be unrealistic for ISR operations to restore aquifers to the mean because in some cases this means that there would have to be less uranium present than there was pre mining Pursuing more conservative concentrations results in a considerable amount of water usage and many of these aquifers were not suitable for drinking water before mining initiated 19 The EPA is considering the need to update the environmental protection standards for uranium mining because current regulations promulgated in response to the Uranium Mill Tailings Radiation Control Act of 1978 do not address the relatively recent process of in situ leaching ISL of uranium from underground ore bodies In a February 2012 letter the EPA states Because the ISL process affects groundwater quality the EPA s Office of Radiation and Indoor Air requested advice from the Science Advisory Board SAB on issues related to design and implementation of groundwater monitoring at ISL mining sites The SAB makes recommendations concerning monitoring to characterize baseline groundwater quality prior to the start of mining operations monitoring to detect any leachate excursions during mining and monitoring to determine when groundwater quality has stabilized after mining operations have been completed The SAB also reviews the advantages and disadvantages of alternative statistical techniques to determine whether post operational groundwater quality has returned to near pre mining conditions and whether mine operation can be predicted not to adversely impact groundwater quality after site closure acceptance 20 See also editHeap leaching Hydraulic fracturing Mineral explorationReferences edit Hardy M Ramey M Yates C Nielsen K 2003 Solution Mining of Nahcolite at the American Soda Project Piceance Creek Colorado PDF 2003 SME Annual Meeting Archived from the original PDF on 2007 09 28 Uranium 2014 International Atomic Energy Agency OCED Nuclear Energy Agency 2014 a b Mudd Gavin M January 2000 Acid In Situ Leach Uranium Mining 1 USA and Australia PDF Tailings amp Mine Waste 00 Fort Collins CO USA Archived from the original PDF on 2009 09 13 HONEYMOON PROJECT Domestic Uranium Production Report Energy Information Administration U S Uranium In Situ Leach Plants by Owner Capacity and Operating Status at End of the Year Domestic Uranium Production Report Energy Information Administration Archived from the original on 2012 05 24 Retrieved September 19 2012 Continued growth in uranium production World Nuclear News World Nuclear Association 2011 05 03 Retrieved 2012 10 16 Uranium production begins Mining Engineering December 2010 Rudenko A A Troshkina I D Danileyko V V Barabanov O S Vatsura F Ya 2021 10 13 Prospects for selective and advanced recovery of rhenium from pregnant solutions of in situ leaching of uranium ores at Dobrovolnoye deposit Gornye Nauki I Tekhnologii Mining Science and Technology Russia 6 3 158 169 doi 10 17073 2500 0632 2021 3 158 169 ISSN 2500 0632 S2CID 241476783 Sutton Gary 2019 Reconciling Mineral Reserves at the well to well in situ copper leaching operation at San Manuel Mine Arizona USA CIM Geology 10 3Q2019 133 141 Peter G Chamberlain and Michael G Pojar 1984 Gold and silver leaching practices in the United States US Bureau of Mines Information Circular 8969 p 24 In Situ Leach ISL Mining of Uranium retrieved 2012 10 12 Schmidt C Groundwater Restoration and Stabilization at the Ruth ISL Test Site in Wyoming USA In In Situ Leaching of Uranium Technical Environmental and Economic Aspects Proceedings of a Technical Committee Meeting IAEA TECDOC 492 Vienna 1989 p 97 126 Vienna 492 97 126 1989 Catchpole Glenn Kirchner Gerhard Restoration of Groundwater Contaminated by Alkaline In Situ Leach of Uranium Mining In Merkel B et al Ed Uranium Mining and Hydrogeology GeoCongress 1 Koln 1995 p 81 89 1995 pp 81 89 Nigbor Michael T Engelmann William H Tweeton Daryl R Case History of a Pilot Scale Acidic In Situ Uranium Leaching Experiment United States Department of the Interior Bureau of Mines Report of Investigations RI 8652 Washington D C 1982 81 p 1982 p 81 Engelmann W H Phillips P E Tweeton D R Loest K W Nigbor M T Restoration of Groundwater Quality Following Pilot Scale Acidic In Situ Uranium Leaching at Nine Mile Lake Site Near Casper Wyoming In Society of Petroleum Engineers Journal June 1982 p 382 398 1982 pp 382 398 Mays W M Restoration of Groundwater at Three In Situ Uranium Mines in Texas In IAEA Ed Uranium in situ leaching Proceedings of a Technical Committee Meeting held in Vienna 5 8 October 1992 IAEA TECDOC 720 Vienna 1993 p 191 215 1993 pp 191 215 J K Otton S Hall In situ recovery uranium mining in the United States Overview of production and remediation issues International Symposium on Uranium Raw Material for the Nuclear Fuel Cycle Exploration Mining Production Supply and Demand Economics and Environmental Issues 2009 In Situ Recovery of Uranium PDF 2010 09 29 Archived from the original PDF on 2013 07 28 Retrieved 2012 10 16 Advisory on EPA s Draft Technical Report entitled Considerations Related to Post Closure Monitoring of Uranium In Situ Leach In Situ Recovery ISL ISR Sites Retrieved 2012 10 13 External links editHeathgate Resources Acid Leach Infopage Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title In situ leach amp oldid 1195311267, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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