fbpx
Wikipedia

Mining

Mining is the extraction of valuable geological materials from the Earth and other astronomical objects. Mining is required to obtain most materials that cannot be grown through agricultural processes, or feasibly created artificially in a laboratory or factory. Ores recovered by mining include metals, coal, oil shale, gemstones, limestone, chalk, dimension stone, rock salt, potash, gravel, and clay. Ore must be a rock or mineral that contains valuable constituent, can be extracted or mined and sold for profit.[1] Mining in a wider sense includes extraction of any non-renewable resource such as petroleum, natural gas, or even water.

Mining of sulfur from a deposit at the edge of Ijen's crater lake

Modern mining processes involve prospecting for ore bodies, analysis of the profit potential of a proposed mine, extraction of the desired materials, and final reclamation or restoration of the land after the mine is closed.[2] Mining materials are often obtained from ore bodies, lodes, veins, seams, reefs, or placer deposits. The exploitation of these deposits for raw material is dependent on investment, labor, energy, refine and transportation cost.

Mining operations can create a negative environmental impact, both during the mining activity and after the mine has closed. Hence, most of the world's nations have passed regulations to decrease the impact; however, the outsized role of mining in generating business for often rural, remote or economically depressed communities means that governments often fail to fully enforce such regulations. Work safety has long been a concern as well, and where enforced, modern practices have significantly improved safety in mines. Unregulated or poorly regulated mining, especially in developing economies, frequently contributes to local human rights violations and environmental conflicts. Mining can also perpetuate political instability through resource conflicts.

History

Prehistory

Since the beginning of civilization, people have used stone, clay and, later, metals found close to the Earth's surface. These were used to make early tools and weapons; for example, high quality flint found in northern France, southern England and Poland was used to create flint tools.[3] Flint mines have been found in chalk areas where seams of the stone were followed underground by shafts and galleries. The mines at Grimes Graves and Krzemionki are especially famous, and like most other flint mines, are Neolithic in origin (c. 4000–3000 BC). Other hard rocks mined or collected for axes included the greenstone of the Langdale axe industry based in the English Lake District.[4] The oldest-known mine on archaeological record is the Ngwenya Mine in Eswatini (Swaziland), which radiocarbon dating shows to be about 43,000 years old. At this site Paleolithic humans mined hematite to make the red pigment ochre.[5][6] Mines of a similar age in Hungary are believed to be sites where Neanderthals may have mined flint for weapons and tools.[7]

Ancient Egypt

 
Malachite

Ancient Egyptians mined malachite at Maadi.[8] At first, Egyptians used the bright green malachite stones for ornamentations and pottery. Later, between 2613 and 2494 BC, large building projects required expeditions abroad to the area of Wadi Maghareh in order to secure minerals and other resources not available in Egypt itself.[9] Quarries for turquoise and copper were also found at Wadi Hammamat, Tura, Aswan and various other Nubian sites on the Sinai Peninsula and at Timna.[9] Quarries for gypsum were found at the Umm el-Sawwan site, gypsum was used to make funerary items for private tombs. Other minerals mined in Egypt from the Old Kingdom (2649-2134 BC) until the Roman Period (30 BC-AD 395) including granite, sandstone, limestone, basalt, travertine, gneiss, galena, and amethyst.[10]

Mining in Egypt occurred in the earliest dynasties. The gold mines of Nubia were among the largest and most extensive of any in Ancient Egypt. These mines are described by the Greek author Diodorus Siculus, who mentions fire-setting as one method used to break down the hard rock holding the gold. One of the complexes is shown in one of the earliest known mining maps.[11] The miners crushed the ore and ground it to a fine powder before washing the powder for the gold dust known as the dry and wet attachment processes.[12]

Ancient Greece and Rome

 
Ancient Roman development of the Dolaucothi Gold Mines, Wales

Mining in Europe has a very long history. Examples include the silver mines of Laurium, which helped support the Greek city state of Athens. Although they had over 20,000 slaves working them, their technology was essentially identical to their Bronze Age predecessors.[13] At other mines, such as on the island of Thassos, marble was quarried by the Parians after they arrived in the 7th century BC.[14] The marble was shipped away and was later found by archaeologists to have been used in buildings including the tomb of Amphipolis. Philip II of Macedon, the father of Alexander the Great, captured the gold mines of Mount Pangeo in 357 BC to fund his military campaigns.[15] He also captured gold mines in Thrace for minting coinage, eventually producing 26 tons per year.

However, it was the Romans who developed large-scale mining methods, especially the use of large volumes of water brought to the minehead by numerous aqueducts. The water was used for a variety of purposes, including removing overburden and rock debris, called hydraulic mining, as well as washing comminuted, or crushed, ores and driving simple machinery.

The Romans used hydraulic mining methods on a large scale to prospect for the veins of ore, especially using a now-obsolete form of mining known as hushing. They built numerous aqueducts to supply water to the minehead, where the water was stored in large reservoirs and tanks. When a full tank was opened, the flood of water sluiced away the overburden to expose the bedrock underneath and any gold-bearing veins. The rock was then worked by fire-setting to heat the rock, which would be quenched with a stream of water. The resulting thermal shock cracked the rock, enabling it to be removed by further streams of water from the overhead tanks. The Roman miners used similar methods to work cassiterite deposits in Cornwall and lead ore in the Pennines.

Sluicing methods were developed by the Romans in Spain in 25 AD to exploit large alluvial gold deposits, the largest site being at Las Medulas, where seven long aqueducts tapped local rivers and sluiced the deposits. The Romans also exploited the silver present in the argentiferous galena in the mines of Cartagena (Cartago Nova), Linares (Castulo), Plasenzuela and Azuaga, among many others.[16] Spain was one of the most important mining regions, but all regions of the Roman Empire were exploited. In Great Britain the natives had mined minerals for millennia,[17] but after the Roman conquest, the scale of the operations increased dramatically, as the Romans needed Britannia's resources, especially gold, silver, tin, and lead.

Roman techniques were not limited to surface mining. They followed the ore veins underground once opencast mining was no longer feasible. At Dolaucothi they stoped out the veins and drove adits through bare rock to drain the stopes. The same adits were also used to ventilate the workings, especially important when fire-setting was used. At other parts of the site, they penetrated the water table and dewatered the mines using several kinds of machines, especially reverse overshot water-wheels. These were used extensively in the copper mines at Rio Tinto in Spain, where one sequence comprised 16 such wheels arranged in pairs, and lifting water about 24 metres (79 ft). They were worked as treadmills with miners standing on the top slats. Many examples of such devices have been found in old Roman mines and some examples are now preserved in the British Museum and the National Museum of Wales.[18]

Medieval Europe

 
Agricola, author of De Re Metallica
 
Gallery, 12th to 13th century, Germany

Mining as an industry underwent dramatic changes in medieval Europe. The mining industry in the early Middle Ages was mainly focused on the extraction of copper and iron. Other precious metals were also used, mainly for gilding or coinage. Initially, many metals were obtained through open-pit mining, and ore was primarily extracted from shallow depths, rather than through deep mine shafts. Around the 14th century, the growing use of weapons, armour, stirrups, and horseshoes greatly increased the demand for iron. Medieval knights, for example, were often laden with up to 100 pounds (45 kg) of plate or chain link armour in addition to swords, lances and other weapons.[19] The overwhelming dependency on iron for military purposes spurred iron production and extraction processes.

The silver crisis of 1465 occurred when all mines had reached depths at which the shafts could no longer be pumped dry with the available technology.[20] Although an increased use of banknotes, credit and copper coins during this period did decrease the value of, and dependence on, precious metals, gold and silver still remained vital to the story of medieval mining.

Due to differences in the social structure of society, the increasing extraction of mineral deposits spread from central Europe to England in the mid-sixteenth century. On the continent, mineral deposits belonged to the crown, and this regalian right was stoutly maintained. But in England, royal mining rights were restricted to gold and silver (of which England had virtually no deposits) by a judicial decision of 1568 and a law in 1688. England had iron, zinc, copper, lead, and tin ores. Landlords who owned the base metals and coal under their estates then had a strong inducement to extract these metals or to lease the deposits and collect royalties from mine operators. English, German, and Dutch capital combined to finance extraction and refining. Hundreds of German technicians and skilled workers were brought over; in 1642 a colony of 4,000 foreigners was mining and smelting copper at Keswick in the northwestern mountains.[21]

Use of water power in the form of water mills was extensive. The water mills were employed in crushing ore, raising ore from shafts, and ventilating galleries by powering giant bellows. Black powder was first used in mining in Selmecbánya, Kingdom of Hungary (now Banská Štiavnica, Slovakia) in 1627.[22] Black powder allowed blasting of rock and earth to loosen and reveal ore veins. Blasting was much faster than fire-setting and allowed the mining of previously impenetrable metals and ores.[23] In 1762, the world's first mining academy was established in the same town there.

The widespread adoption of agricultural innovations such as the iron plowshare, as well as the growing use of metal as a building material, was also a driving force in the tremendous growth of the iron industry during this period. Inventions like the arrastra were often used by the Spanish to pulverize ore after being mined. This device was powered by animals and used the same principles used for grain threshing.[24]

Much of the knowledge of medieval mining techniques comes from books such as Biringuccio's De la pirotechnia and probably most importantly from Georg Agricola's De re metallica (1556). These books detail many different mining methods used in German and Saxon mines. A prime issue in medieval mines, which Agricola explains in detail, was the removal of water from mining shafts. As miners dug deeper to access new veins, flooding became a very real obstacle. The mining industry became dramatically more efficient and prosperous with the invention of mechanically- and animal-driven pumps.

Africa

Iron metallurgy in Africa dates back over four thousand years. Gold became an important commodity for Africa during the trans-Saharan gold trade from the 7th century to the 14th century. Gold was often traded to Mediterranean economies that demanded gold and could supply salt, even though much of Africa was abundant with salt due to the mines and resources in the Sahara desert. The trading of gold for salt was mostly used to promote trade between the different economies.[25] Since the 19th century, gold and diamond mining in Southern Africa has had major political and economic impacts. The Democratic Republic of Congo is the largest producer of diamonds in Africa, with an estimated 12 million carats in 2019. Other types of mining reserves in Africa include cobalt, bauxite, iron ore, coal, and copper.[26]

Oceania

Gold and coal mining started in Australia and New Zealand in the 19th century. Nickel has become important in the economy of New Caledonia.

In Fiji, in 1934, the Emperor Gold Mining Company Ltd. established operations at Vatukoula, followed in 1935 by the Loloma Gold Mines, N.L., and then by Fiji Mines Development Ltd. (aka Dolphin Mines Ltd.). These developments ushered in a “mining boom”, with gold production rising more than a hundred-fold, from 931.4 oz in 1934 to 107,788.5 oz in 1939, an order of magnitude then comparable to the combined output of New Zealand and Australia's eastern states.[27]

Americas

 
Lead mining in the upper Mississippi River region of the U.S., 1865

During prehistoric times, early Americans mined large amounts of copper along Lake Superior's Keweenaw Peninsula and in nearby Isle Royale; metallic copper was still present near the surface in colonial times.[28][29][30] Indigenous peoples used Lake Superior copper from at least 5,000 years ago;[28] copper tools, arrowheads, and other artifacts that were part of an extensive native trade-network have been discovered. In addition, obsidian, flint, and other minerals were mined, worked, and traded.[29] Early French explorers who encountered the sites[clarification needed] made no use of the metals due to the difficulties of transporting them,[29] but the copper was eventually[when?] traded throughout the continent along major river routes.[citation needed]

 
Miners at the Tamarack Mine in Copper Country, Michigan, U.S. in 1905.

In the early colonial history of the Americas, "native gold and silver was quickly expropriated and sent back to Spain in fleets of gold- and silver-laden galleons",[31] the gold and silver originating mostly from mines in Central and South America. Turquoise dated at 700 AD was mined in pre-Columbian America; in the Cerillos Mining District in New Mexico, an estimate of "about 15,000 tons of rock had been removed from Mt. Chalchihuitl using stone tools before 1700."[32][33]

In 1727 Louis Denys (Denis) (1675–1741), sieur de La Ronde – brother of Simon-Pierre Denys de Bonaventure and the son-in-law of René Chartier – took command of Fort La Pointe at Chequamegon Bay; where natives informed him of an island of copper. La Ronde obtained permission from the French crown to operate mines in 1733, becoming "the first practical miner on Lake Superior"; seven years later, mining was halted by an outbreak between Sioux and Chippewa tribes.[34]

Mining in the United States became widespread in the 19th century, and the United States Congress passed the General Mining Act of 1872 to encourage mining of federal lands.[35] As with the California Gold Rush in the mid-19th century, mining for minerals and precious metals, along with ranching, became a driving factor in the U.S. Westward Expansion to the Pacific coast. With the exploration of the West, mining camps sprang up and "expressed a distinctive spirit, an enduring legacy to the new nation"; Gold Rushers would experience the same problems as the Land Rushers of the transient West that preceded them.[36] Aided by railroads, many people traveled West for work opportunities in mining. Western cities such as Denver and Sacramento originated as mining towns.[37]

When new areas were explored, it was usually the gold (placer and then lode) and then silver that were taken into possession and extracted first. Other metals would often wait for railroads or canals, as coarse gold dust and nuggets do not require smelting and are easy to identify and transport.[30]

Modernity

 
View showing miners' clothes suspended by pulleys, also wash basins and ventilation system, Kirkland Lake, Ontario, 1936.

In the early 20th century, the gold and silver rush to the western United States also stimulated mining for coal as well as base metals such as copper, lead, and iron. Areas in modern Montana, Utah, Arizona, and later Alaska became predominate suppliers of copper to the world, which was increasingly demanding copper for electrical and households goods.[38] Canada's mining industry grew more slowly than did the United States' due to limitations in transportation, capital, and U.S. competition; Ontario was the major producer of the early 20th century with nickel, copper, and gold.[38]

Meanwhile, Australia experienced the Australian gold rushes and by the 1850s was producing 40% of the world's gold, followed by the establishment of large mines such as the Mount Morgan Mine, which ran for nearly a hundred years, Broken Hill ore deposit (one of the largest zinc-lead ore deposits), and the iron ore mines at Iron Knob. After declines in production, another boom in mining occurred in the 1960s. Now, in the early 21st century, Australia remains a major world mineral producer.[39]

As the 21st century begins, a globalized mining industry of large multinational corporations has arisen. Peak minerals and environmental impacts have also become a concern. Different elements, particularly rare earth minerals, have begun to increase in demand as a result of new technologies.[40]

Mine development and life cycle

The process of mining from discovery of an ore body through extraction of minerals and finally to returning the land to its natural state consists of several distinct steps. The first is discovery of the ore body, which is carried out through prospecting or exploration to find and then define the extent, location and value of the ore body. This leads to a mathematical resource estimation to estimate the size and grade of the deposit.

This estimation is used to conduct a pre-feasibility study to determine the theoretical economics of the ore deposit. This identifies, early on, whether further investment in estimation and engineering studies is warranted and identifies key risks and areas for further work. The next step is to conduct a feasibility study to evaluate the financial viability, the technical and financial risks, and the robustness of the project.

This is when the mining company makes the decision whether to develop the mine or to walk away from the project. This includes mine planning to evaluate the economically recoverable portion of the deposit, the metallurgy and ore recoverability, marketability and payability of the ore concentrates, engineering concerns, milling and infrastructure costs, finance and equity requirements, and an analysis of the proposed mine from the initial excavation all the way through to reclamation. The proportion of a deposit that is economically recoverable is dependent on the enrichment factor of the ore in the area.

To gain access to the mineral deposit within an area it is often necessary to mine through or remove waste material which is not of immediate interest to the miner. The total movement of ore and waste constitutes the mining process. Often more waste than ore is mined during the life of a mine, depending on the nature and location of the ore body. Waste removal and placement is a major cost to the mining operator, so a detailed characterization of the waste material forms an essential part of the geological exploration program for a mining operation.

Once the analysis determines a given ore body is worth recovering, development begins to create access to the ore body. The mine buildings and processing plants are built, and any necessary equipment is obtained. The operation of the mine to recover the ore begins and continues as long as the company operating the mine finds it economical to do so. Once all the ore that the mine can produce profitably is recovered, reclamation can begin, to make the land used by the mine suitable for future use.

Technical and economic challenges notwithstanding, successful mine development must also address human factors. Working conditions are paramount to success, especially with regard to exposures to dusts, radiation, noise, explosives hazards, and vibration, as well as illumination standards. Mining today increasingly must address environmental and community impacts, including psychological and sociological dimensions. Thus, mining educator Frank T. M. White (1909–1971), broadened the focus to the “total environment of mining”, including reference to community development around mining, and how mining is portrayed to an urban society, which depends on the industry, although seemingly unaware of this dependency. He stated, “[I]n the past, mining engineers have not been called upon to study the psychological, sociological and personal problems of their own industry – aspects that nowadays are assuming tremendous importance. The mining engineer must rapidly expand his knowledge and his influence into these newer fields.”[41]

Techniques

 
Underground longwall mining.

Mining techniques can be divided into two common excavation types: surface mining and sub-surface (underground) mining. Today, surface mining is much more common, and produces, for example, 85% of minerals (excluding petroleum and natural gas) in the United States, including 98% of metallic ores.[42]

Targets are divided into two general categories of materials: placer deposits, consisting of valuable minerals contained within river gravels, beach sands, and other unconsolidated materials; and lode deposits, where valuable minerals are found in veins, in layers, or in mineral grains generally distributed throughout a mass of actual rock. Both types of ore deposit, placer or lode, are mined by both surface and underground methods.[citation needed]

Some mining, including much of the rare earth elements and uranium mining, is done by less-common methods, such as in-situ leaching: this technique involves digging neither at the surface nor underground. The extraction of target minerals by this technique requires that they be soluble, e.g., potash, potassium chloride, sodium chloride, sodium sulfate, which dissolve in water. Some minerals, such as copper minerals and uranium oxide, require acid or carbonate solutions to dissolve.[43]

Explosives in Mining

Explosives have been used in surface mining and sub-surface mining to blast out rock and ore intended for processing. The most common explosive used in mining is ammonium nitrate.[44] Between 1870 and 1920, in Queensland Australia, an increase in mining accidents lead to more safety measures surrounding the use of explosives for mining.[45] In the United States of America, between 1990 and 1999, about 22.3 billion kilograms of explosives were used in mining quarrying and other industries; Moreover "coal mining used 66.4%, nonmetal mining and quarrying 13.5%, metal mining 10.4%, construction 7.1%, and all other users 2.6%".[44]

Artisanal

 
Artisanal gold mines near Dodoma, Tanzania. Makeshift sails lead fresh air underground.

An artisanal miner or small-scale miner (ASM) is a subsistence miner who is not officially employed by a mining company, but works independently, mining minerals using their own resources, usually by hand.[46]

Small-scale mining includes enterprises or individuals that employ workers for mining, but generally still using manually-intensive methods, working with hand tools.

 
Interior of an artisanal mine near Low's Creek, Mpumalanga Province, South Africa. The human figures, exploring this mine, show the scale of tunnels driven entirely with hand tools (two-kilogram (4.4 lb) hammer and hand-forged scrap-steel chisel).

Artisanal miners often undertake the activity of mining seasonally – for example crops are planted in the rainy season, and mining is pursued in the dry season. However, they also frequently travel to mining areas and work year-round. There are four broad types of ASM: permanent artisanal mining, seasonal (annually migrating during idle agriculture periods), rush-type (massive migration, pulled often by commodity price jumps), and shock-push (poverty-drive, following conflict or natural disasters).[47]

ASM is an important socio-economic sector for the rural poor in many developing nations, many of whom have few other options for supporting their families. Over 90% of the world's mining workforce are ASM. There are an estimated 40.5 million men, women and children directly engaged in ASM, from over 80 countries in the global south. 20% of the global gold supply is produced by the ASM sector, as well as 80% of the global gemstone and 20% of global diamond supply, and 25% of global tin production.[48] More than 150 million depend on ASM for their livelihood. 70 - 80% of small-scale miners are informal, and approximately 30% are women, although this ranges in certain countries and commodities from 5% to 80%.[49]

Surface

Surface mining is done by removing surface vegetation, dirt, and bedrock to reach buried ore deposits. Techniques of surface mining include: open-pit mining, which is the recovery of materials from an open pit in the ground; quarrying, identical to open-pit mining except that it refers to sand, stone and clay; strip mining, which consists of stripping surface layers off to reveal ore underneath; and mountaintop removal, commonly associated with coal mining, which involves taking the top of a mountain off to reach ore deposits at depth. Most placer deposits, because they are shallowly buried, are mined by surface methods. Finally, landfill mining involves sites where landfills are excavated and processed.[50] Landfill mining has been thought of as a long-term solution to methane emissions and local pollution.[51]

High wall

 
Coalburg Seam highwall mining at ADDCAR 16 Logan County WV

High wall mining, which evolved from auger mining, is another form of surface mining. In high wall mining, the remaining part of a coal seam previously exploited by other surface-mining techniques has too much overburden to be removed but can still be profitably exploited from the side of the artificial cliff made by previous mining.[52] A typical cycle alternates sumping, which undercuts the seam, and shearing, which raises and lowers the cutter-head boom to cut the entire height of the coal seam. As the coal recovery cycle continues, the cutter-head is progressively launched further into the coal seam. High wall mining can produce thousands of tons of coal in contour-strip operations with narrow benches, previously mined areas, trench mine applications and steep-dip seams.[citation needed]

Underground mining

 
Mantrip used for transporting miners within an underground mine
 
Caterpillar Highwall Miner HW300 – Technology Bridging Underground and Open Pit Mining

Sub-surface mining consists of digging tunnels or shafts into the earth to reach buried ore deposits. Ore, for processing, and waste rock, for disposal, are brought to the surface through the tunnels and shafts. Sub-surface mining can be classified by the type of access shafts used, and the extraction method or the technique used to reach the mineral deposit. Drift mining uses horizontal access tunnels, slope mining uses diagonally sloping access shafts, and shaft mining uses vertical access shafts. Mining in hard and soft rock formations requires different techniques.[53]

Other methods include shrinkage stope mining, which is mining upward, creating a sloping underground room, long wall mining, which is grinding a long ore surface underground, and room and pillar mining, which is removing ore from rooms while leaving pillars in place to support the roof of the room. Room and pillar mining often leads to retreat mining, in which supporting pillars are removed as miners retreat, allowing the room to cave in, thereby loosening more ore. Additional sub-surface mining methods include hard rock mining, bore hole mining, drift and fill mining, long hole slope mining, sub level caving, and block caving.[citation needed]

Machines

 
The Bagger 288 is a bucket-wheel excavator used in strip mining. It is also one of the largest land vehicles of all time.
 
A Bucyrus Erie 2570 dragline and CAT 797 haul truck at the North Antelope Rochelle opencut coal mine

Heavy machinery is used in mining to explore and develop sites, to remove and stockpile overburden, to break and remove rocks of various hardness and toughness, to process the ore, and to carry out reclamation projects after the mine is closed. Bulldozers, drills, explosives and trucks are all necessary for excavating the land. In the case of placer mining, unconsolidated gravel, or alluvium, is fed into machinery consisting of a hopper and a shaking screen or trommel which frees the desired minerals from the waste gravel. The minerals are then concentrated using sluices or jigs.[citation needed]

Large drills are used to sink shafts, excavate stopes, and obtain samples for analysis. Trams are used to transport miners, minerals and waste. Lifts carry miners into and out of mines, and move rock and ore out, and machinery in and out, of underground mines. Huge trucks, shovels and cranes are employed in surface mining to move large quantities of overburden and ore. Processing plants use large crushers, mills, reactors, roasters and other equipment to consolidate the mineral-rich material and extract the desired compounds and metals from the ore.[citation needed]

Processing

Once the mineral is extracted, it is often then processed. The science of extractive metallurgy is a specialized area in the science of metallurgy that studies the extraction of valuable metals from their ores, especially through chemical or mechanical means.[54][55]

Mineral processing (or mineral dressing) is a specialized area in the science of metallurgy that studies the mechanical means of crushing, grinding, and washing that enable the separation (extractive metallurgy) of valuable metals or minerals from their gangue (waste material). Processing of placer ore material consists of gravity-dependent methods of separation, such as sluice boxes. Only minor shaking or washing may be necessary to disaggregate (unclump) the sands or gravels before processing. Processing of ore from a lode mine, whether it is a surface or subsurface mine, requires that the rock ore be crushed and pulverized before extraction of the valuable minerals begins. After lode ore is crushed, recovery of the valuable minerals is done by one, or a combination of several, mechanical and chemical techniques.[56]

Since most metals are present in ores as oxides or sulfides, the metal needs to be reduced to its metallic form. This can be accomplished through chemical means such as smelting or through electrolytic reduction, as in the case of aluminium. Geometallurgy combines the geologic sciences with extractive metallurgy and mining.[40]

In 2018, led by Chemistry and Biochemistry professor Bradley D. Smith, University of Notre Dame researchers "invented a new class of molecules whose shape and size enable them to capture and contain precious metal ions," reported in a study published by the Journal of the American Chemical Society. The new method "converts gold-containing ore into chloroauric acid and extracts it using an industrial solvent. The container molecules are able to selectively separate the gold from the solvent without the use of water stripping." The newly developed molecules can eliminate water stripping, whereas mining traditionally "relies on a 125-year-old method that treats gold-containing ore with large quantities of poisonous sodium cyanide... this new process has a milder environmental impact and that, besides gold, it can be used for capturing other metals such as platinum and palladium," and could also be used in urban mining processes that remove precious metals from wastewater streams.[57]

Environmental effects

Environmental effects of mining can occur at local, regional, and global scales through direct and indirect mining practices. The effects can result in erosion, sinkholes, loss of biodiversity, or the contamination of soil, groundwater, and surface water by the chemicals emitted from mining processes. These processes also affect the atmosphere from the emissions of carbon which have an effect on the quality of human health and biodiversity.[58] Some mining methods (lithium mining, phosphate mining, coal mining, mountaintop removal mining, and sand mining) may have such significant environmental and public health effects that mining companies in some countries are required to follow strict environmental and rehabilitation codes to ensure that the mined area returns to its original state.

Environmental regulation

 
Iron hydroxide precipitate stains a stream receiving acid drainage from surface coal mining.

Countries with strongly enforced mining regulations commonly require environmental impact assessment, development of environmental management plans, and mine closure planning prior beginning mine operations. Environmental monitoring during operation and after closure may also be required. Government regulations may not be well enforced, especially in the developing world.[40]

For major mining companies and any company seeking international financing, there are a number of other mechanisms to enforce environmental standards. These generally relate to financing standards such as the Equator Principles, IFC environmental standards, and criteria for Socially responsible investing. Mining companies have used this oversight from the financial sector to argue for some level of industry self-regulation.[59] In 1992, a Draft Code of Conduct for Transnational Corporations was proposed at the Rio Earth Summit by the UN Centre for Transnational Corporations (UNCTC), but the Business Council for Sustainable Development (BCSD) together with the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) argued successfully for self-regulation instead.[60]

This was followed by the Global Mining Initiative which was begun by nine of the largest metals and mining companies and which led to the formation of the International Council on Mining and Metals, whose purpose was to "act as a catalyst" in an effort to improve social and environmental performance in the mining and metals industry internationally.[59] The mining industry has provided funding to various conservation groups, some of which have been working with conservation agendas that are at odds with an emerging acceptance of the rights of indigenous people – particularly the right to make land-use decisions.[61]

Certification of mines with good practices occurs through the International Organization for Standardization (ISO). For example, ISO 9000 and ISO 14001, which certify an "auditable environmental management system", involve short inspections, although they have been accused of lacking rigor.[clarification needed][59]: 183–84  Certification is also available through Ceres' Global Reporting Initiative, but these reports are voluntary and unverified. Miscellaneous other certification programs exist for various projects, typically through nonprofit groups.[59]: 185–86 

The purpose of a 2012 EPS PEAKS paper[62] was to provide evidence on policies managing ecological costs and maximize socio-economic benefits of mining using host country regulatory initiatives. It found existing literature suggesting donors encourage developing countries to:

  • Make the environment-poverty link and introduce cutting-edge wealth measures and natural capital accounts.
  • Reform old taxes in line with more recent financial innovation, engage directly with the companies, enact land use and impact assessments, and incorporate specialized support and standards agencies.
  • Set in play transparency and community participation initiatives using the wealth accrued.

Waste

 
Location of waste rock storage (center) at Teghut (village) Copper-Molybdenum Mine in Armenia's northern Lori province.

Ore mills generate large amounts of waste, called tailings.[63] For example, 99 tons of waste is generated per ton of copper, with even higher ratios in gold mining – because only 5.3 g of gold is extracted per ton of ore, a ton of gold produces 200,000 tons of tailings.[64] (As time goes on and richer deposits are exhausted – and technology improves – this number is going down to .5 g and less.) These tailings can be toxic. Tailings, which are usually produced as a slurry, are most commonly dumped into ponds made from naturally existing valleys.[65] These ponds are secured by impoundments (dams or embankment dams).[65] In 2000 it was estimated that 3,500 tailings impoundments existed, and that every year, 2 to 5 major failures and 35 minor failures occurred.[66] For example, in the Marcopper mining disaster at least 2 million tons of tailings were released into a local river.[66] In 2015, Barrick Gold Corporation spilled over 1 million liters of cyanide into a total of five rivers in Argentina near their Veladero mine.[67] Since 2007 in central Finland, the Talvivaara Terrafame polymetal mine's waste effluent and leaks of saline mine water have resulted in ecological collapse of a nearby lake.[68] Subaqueous tailings disposal is another option.[65] The mining industry has argued that submarine tailings disposal (STD), which disposes of tailings in the sea, is ideal because it avoids the risks of tailings ponds. The practice is illegal in the United States and Canada, but it is used in the developing world.[69]

The waste is classified as either sterile or mineralized, with acid generating potential, and the movement and storage of this material form a major part of the mine planning process. When the mineralised package is determined by an economic cut-off, the near-grade mineralised waste is usually dumped separately with view to later treatment should market conditions change and it becomes economically viable. Civil engineering design parameters are used in the design of the waste dumps, and special conditions apply to high-rainfall areas and to seismically active areas. Waste dump designs must meet all regulatory requirements of the country in whose jurisdiction the mine is located. It is also common practice to rehabilitate dumps to an internationally acceptable standard, which in some cases means that higher standards than the local regulatory standard are applied.[66]

Industry

 
The Särkijärvi pit of the apatite mine in Siilinjärvi, Finland

Mining exists in many countries. London is the headquarters for large miners such as Anglo American, BHP and Rio Tinto.[70] The US mining industry is also large, but it is dominated by extraction of coal and other nonmetal minerals (e.g., rock and sand), and various regulations have worked to reduce the significance of mining in the United States.[70] In 2007, the total market capitalization of mining companies was reported at US$962 billion, which compares to a total global market cap of publicly traded companies of about US$50 trillion in 2007.[71] In 2002, Chile and Peru were reportedly the major mining countries of South America.[72] The mineral industry of Africa includes the mining of various minerals; it produces relatively little of the industrial metals copper, lead, and zinc, but according to one estimate has as a percent of world reserves 40% of gold, 60% of cobalt, and 90% of the world's platinum group metals.[73] Mining in India is a significant part of that country's economy. In the developed world, mining in Australia, with BHP founded and headquartered in the country, and mining in Canada are particularly significant. For rare earth minerals mining, China reportedly controlled 95% of production in 2013.[74]

 
The Bingham Canyon Mine of Rio Tinto's subsidiary, Kennecott Utah Copper.

While exploration and mining can be conducted by individual entrepreneurs or small businesses, most modern-day mines are large enterprises requiring large amounts of capital to establish. Consequently, the mining sector of the industry is dominated by large, often multinational, companies, most of them publicly listed. It can be argued that what is referred to as the 'mining industry' is actually two sectors, one specializing in exploration for new resources and the other in mining those resources. The exploration sector is typically made up of individuals and small mineral resource companies, called "juniors", which are dependent on venture capital. The mining sector is made up of large multinational companies that are sustained by production from their mining operations. Various other industries such as equipment manufacture, environmental testing, and metallurgy analysis rely on, and support, the mining industry throughout the world. Canadian stock exchanges have a particular focus on mining companies, particularly junior exploration companies through Toronto's TSX Venture Exchange; Canadian companies raise capital on these exchanges and then invest the money in exploration globally.[70] Some have argued that below juniors there exists a substantial sector of illegitimate companies primarily focused on manipulating stock prices.[70]

Mining operations can be grouped into five major categories in terms of their respective resources. These are oil and gas extraction, coal mining, metal ore mining, nonmetallic mineral mining and quarrying, and mining support activities.[75] Of all of these categories, oil and gas extraction remains one of the largest in terms of its global economic importance. Prospecting potential mining sites, a vital area of concern for the mining industry, is now done using sophisticated new technologies such as seismic prospecting and remote-sensing satellites. Mining is heavily affected by the prices of the commodity minerals, which are often volatile. The 2000s commodities boom ("commodities supercycle") increased the prices of commodities, driving aggressive mining. In addition, the price of gold increased dramatically in the 2000s, which increased gold mining; for example, one study found that conversion of forest in the Amazon increased six-fold from the period 2003–2006 (292 ha/yr) to the period 2006–2009 (1,915 ha/yr), largely due to artisanal mining.[76]

Corporate classifications

Mining companies can be classified based on their size and financial capabilities:

  • Major companies are considered to have an adjusted annual mining-related revenue of more than US$500 million, with the financial capability to develop a major mine on its own.
  • Intermediate companies have at least $50 million in annual revenue but less than $500 million.
  • Junior companies rely on equity financing as their principal means of funding exploration. Juniors are mainly pure exploration companies, but may also produce minimally, and do not have a revenue exceeding US$50 million.[77]

Re their valuation, and stock market characteristics, see Valuation (finance) § Valuation of mining projects.

Regulation and governance

 
EITI Global Conference 2016

New regulations and a process of legislative reforms aim to improve the harmonization and stability of the mining sector in mineral-rich countries.[78] New legislation for mining industry in African countries still appears to be an issue, but has the potential to be solved, when a consensus is reached on the best approach.[79] By the beginning of the 21st century, the booming and increasingly complex mining sector in mineral-rich countries was providing only slight benefits to local communities, especially in given the sustainability issues. Increasing debate and influence by NGOs and local communities called for new approaches which would also include disadvantaged communities, and work towards sustainable development even after mine closure (including transparency and revenue management). By the early 2000s, community development issues and resettlements became mainstream concerns in World Bank mining projects.[79] Mining-industry expansion after mineral prices increased in 2003 and also potential fiscal revenues in those countries created an omission in the other economic sectors in terms of finances and development. Furthermore, this highlighted regional and local demand for mining revenues and an inability of sub-national governments to effectively use the revenues. The Fraser Institute (a Canadian think tank) has highlighted[clarification needed] the environmental protection laws in developing countries, as well as voluntary efforts by mining companies to improve their environmental impact.[80]

In 2007, the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) was mainstreamed[clarification needed] in all countries cooperating with the World Bank in mining industry reform.[79] The EITI operates and was implemented with the support of the EITI multi-donor trust fund, managed by the World Bank.[81] The EITI aims to increase transparency in transactions between governments and companies in extractive industries[82] by monitoring the revenues and benefits between industries and recipient governments. The entrance process is voluntary for each country and is monitored by multiple stakeholders including governments, private companies and civil society representatives, responsible for disclosure and dissemination of the reconciliation report;[79] however, the competitive disadvantage of company-by-company public report is for some of the businesses in Ghana at least, the main constraint.[83] Therefore, the outcome assessment in terms of failure or success of the new EITI regulation does not only "rest on the government's shoulders" but also on civil society and companies.[84]

However, implementation has issues; inclusion or exclusion of artisanal mining and small-scale mining (ASM) from the EITI and how to deal with "non-cash" payments made by companies to subnational governments. Furthermore, the disproportionate revenues the mining industry can bring to the comparatively small number of people that it employs,[85] causes other problems, like a lack of investment in other less lucrative sectors, leading to swings in government revenue because of volatility in the oil markets. Artisanal mining is clearly an issue in EITI Countries such as the Central African Republic, D.R. Congo, Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone – i.e. almost half of the mining countries implementing the EITI.[85] Among other things, limited scope of the EITI involving disparity in terms of knowledge of the industry and negotiation skills, thus far flexibility of the policy (e.g. liberty of the countries to expand beyond the minimum requirements and adapt it to their needs), creates another risk of unsuccessful implementation. Public awareness increase, where government should act as a bridge between public and initiative for a successful outcome of the policy is an important element to be considered.[86]

World Bank

 
World Bank logo

The World Bank has been involved in mining since 1955, mainly through grants from its International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, with the Bank's Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency offering political risk insurance.[87] Between 1955 and 1990 it provided about $2 billion to fifty mining projects, broadly categorized as reform and rehabilitation, greenfield mine construction, mineral processing, technical assistance, and engineering. These projects have been criticized, particularly the Ferro Carajas project of Brazil, begun in 1981.[88] The World Bank established mining codes intended to increase foreign investment; in 1988, it solicited feedback from 45 mining companies on how to increase their involvement.[59]: 20 

In 1992, the World Bank began to push for privatization of government-owned mining companies with a new set of codes, beginning with its report The Strategy for African Mining. In 1997, Latin America's largest miner Companhia Vale do Rio Doce (CVRD) was privatized. These and other developments, such as the Philippines 1995 Mining Act, led the bank to publish a third report (Assistance for Minerals Sector Development and Reform in Member Countries) which endorsed mandatory environment impact assessments and attention to the concerns of the local population. The codes based on this report are influential in the legislation of developing nations. The new codes are intended to encourage development through tax holidays, zero custom duties, reduced income taxes, and related measures.[59]: 22  The results of these codes were analyzed by a group from the University of Quebec, which concluded that the codes promote foreign investment but "fall very short of permitting sustainable development".[89] The observed negative correlation between natural resources and economic development is known as the resource curse.[citation needed]

Safety

 
Mining transport in Devnya, Bulgaria.
 
A coal miner in West Virginia spraying rockdust to reduce the combustible fraction of coal dust in the air.

Safety has long been a concern in the mining business, especially in sub-surface mining. The Courrières mine disaster, Europe's worst mining accident, involved the death of 1,099 miners in Northern France on March 10, 1906. This disaster was surpassed only by the Benxihu Colliery accident in China on April 26, 1942, which killed 1,549 miners.[90] While mining today is substantially safer than it was in previous decades, mining accidents still occur. Government figures indicate that 5,000 Chinese miners die in accidents each year, while other reports have suggested a figure as high as 20,000.[91] Between 1870 and 1920, in Queensland Australia, an increase in mining accidents lead to more safety measures surrounding the use of explosives for mining.[92] Mining accidents continue worldwide, including accidents causing dozens of fatalities at a time such as the 2007 Ulyanovskaya Mine disaster in Russia, the 2009 Heilongjiang mine explosion in China, and the 2010 Upper Big Branch Mine disaster in the United States. Mining has been identified by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) as a priority industry sector in the National Occupational Research Agenda (NORA) to identify and provide intervention strategies regarding occupational health and safety issues.[93] The Mining Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) was established in 1978 to "work to prevent death, illness, and injury from mining and promote safe and healthful workplaces for US miners."[94] Since its implementation in 1978, the number of miner fatalities has decreased from 242 miners in 1978 to 24 miners in 2019.[citation needed]

There are numerous occupational hazards associated with mining, including exposure to rockdust which can lead to diseases such as silicosis, asbestosis, and pneumoconiosis. Gases in the mine can lead to asphyxiation and could also be ignited. Mining equipment can generate considerable noise, putting workers at risk for hearing loss. Cave-ins, rock falls, and exposure to excess heat are also known hazards. The current NIOSH Recommended Exposure Limit (REL) of noise is 85 dBA with a 3 dBA exchange rate and the MSHA Permissible Exposure Limit (PEL) is 90 dBA with a 5 dBA exchange rate as an 8-hour time-weighted average. NIOSH has found that 25% of noise-exposed workers in Mining, Quarrying, and Oil and Gas Extraction have hearing impairment.[95] The prevalence of hearing loss increased by 1% from 1991 to 2001 within these workers.[citation needed]

Noise studies have been conducted in several mining environments. Stageloaders (84-102 dBA), shearers (85-99 dBA), auxiliary fans (84–120 dBA), continuous mining machines (78–109 dBA), and roof bolters (92–103 dBA) represent some of the noisiest equipment in underground coal mines.[96] Dragline oilers, dozer operators, and welders using air arcing were occupations with the highest noise exposures among surface coal miners.[97] Coal mines had the highest hearing loss injury likelihood.[98]

Human rights

In addition to the environmental impacts of mining processes, a prominent criticism pertaining to this form of extractive practice and of mining companies are the human rights abuses occurring within mining sites and communities close to them.[99] Frequently, despite being protected by International Labor rights, miners are not given appropriate equipment to provide them with protection from possible mine collapse or from harmful pollutants and chemicals expelled during the mining process, work in inhumane conditions spending numerous hours working in extreme heat, darkness and 14 hour workdays with no allocated time for breaks.[100]

Child labor

 
Breaker boys: child workers who broke down coal at a mine in South Pittston, Pennsylvania, United States in the early 20th century

Included within the human rights abuses that occur during mining processes are instances of child labor. These instances are a cause for widespread criticism of mines harvesting cobalt, a mineral essential for powering modern technologies such as laptops, smartphones and electric vehicles. Many of these cases of child laborers are found in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Reports have risen of children carrying sacks of cobalt weighing 25 kg from small mines to local traders[101] being paid for their work only in food and accommodation. A number of companies such as Apple, Google, Microsoft and Tesla have been implicated in lawsuits brought by families whose children were severely injured or killed during mining activities in Congo.[102] In December 2019, 14 Congolese families filed a lawsuit against Glencore, a mining company which supplies the essential cobalt to these multinational corporations with allegations of negligence that led to the deaths of children or injuries such as broken spines, emotional distress and forced labor.[citation needed]

Indigenous peoples

There have also been instances of killings and evictions attributed to conflicts with mining companies. Almost a third of 227 murders in 2020 were of Indigenous peoples rights activists on the frontlines of climate change activism linked to logging, mining, large-scale agribusiness, hydroelectric dams, and other infrastructure, according to Global Witness.[103]

The relationship between indigenous peoples and mining is defined by struggles over access to land. In Australia, the Aboriginal Bininj said mining posed a threat to their living culture and could damage sacred heritage sites.[104][105]

In the Philippines, an anti-mining movement has raised concerns regarding "the total disregard for [Indigenous communities'] ancestral land rights".[106] Ifugao peoples' opposition to mining led a governor to proclaim a ban on mining operations in Mountain Province, Philippines.[106]

In Brazil, more than 170 tribes organized a march to oppose controversial attempts to strip back indigenous land rights and open their territories to mining operations.[107] The United Nations Commission on Human Rights has called on Brazil's Supreme Court to uphold Indigenous land rights to prevent exploitation by mining groups and industrial agriculture.[108]

Records

 
Chuquicamata, Chile, site of the largest circumference and second deepest open pit copper mine in the world.

As of 2019, Mponeng is the world's deepest mine from ground level, reaching a depth of 4 km (2.5 mi) below ground level. The trip from the surface to the bottom of the mine takes over an hour. It is a gold mine in South Africa's Gauteng province. Previously known as Western Deep Levels #1 Shaft, the underground and surface works were commissioned in 1987. The mine is considered to be one of the most substantial gold mines in the world.

The Moab Khutsong gold mine in North West Province (South Africa) has the world's longest winding steel wire rope, which is able to lower workers to 3,054 metres (10,020 ft) in one uninterrupted four-minute journey.[109]

The deepest mine in Europe is the 16th shaft of the uranium mines in Příbram, Czech Republic, at 1,838 metres (6,030 ft).[110] Second is Bergwerk Saar in Saarland, Germany, at 1,750 metres (5,740 ft).[citation needed]

The deepest open-pit mine in the world is Bingham Canyon Mine in Bingham Canyon, Utah, United States, at over 1,200 metres (3,900 ft). The largest and second deepest open-pit copper mine in the world is Chuquicamata in northern Chile at 900 metres (3,000 ft), which annually produces 443,000 tons of copper and 20,000 tons of molybdenum.[111][112][113]

The deepest open-pit mine with respect to sea level is Tagebau Hambach in Germany, where the base of the pit is 299 metres (981 ft) below sea level.[114]

The largest underground mine is Kiirunavaara Mine in Kiruna, Sweden. With 450 kilometres (280 mi) of roads, 40 million tonnes of annually produced ore, and a depth of 1,270 metres (4,170 ft), it is also one of the most modern underground mines. The deepest borehole in the world is Kola Superdeep Borehole at 12,262 metres (40,230 ft), but this is connected to scientific drilling, not mining.[115]

Metal reserves and recycling

 
Macro of native copper about 1+12 inches (4 cm) in size.
 
The Pyhäsalmi Mine, a metal mine in Pyhäjärvi, Finland
 
A metal recycling plant in South Carolina that has been abandoned for years.

During the 20th century, the variety of metals used in society grew rapidly. Today, the development of major nations such as China and India and advances in technologies are fueling an ever-greater demand. The result is that metal mining activities are expanding and more and more of the world's metal stocks are above ground in use rather than below ground as unused reserves. An example is the in-use stock of copper. Between 1932 and 1999, copper in use in the US rose from 73 kilograms (161 lb) to 238 kilograms (525 lb) per person.[116]

95% of the energy used to make aluminium from bauxite ore is saved by using recycled material.[117] However, levels of metals recycling are generally low. In 2010, the International Resource Panel, hosted by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), published reports on metal stocks that exist within society[118] and their recycling rates.[116]

The report's authors observed that the metal stocks in society can serve as huge mines above ground. However, they warned that the recycling rates of some rare metals used in applications such as mobile phones, battery packs for hybrid cars, and fuel cells are so low that unless future end-of-life recycling rates are dramatically stepped up these critical metals will become unavailable for use in modern technology.[citation needed]

As recycling rates are low and so much metal has already been extracted, some landfills now contain higher concentrations of metal than mines themselves.[119] This is especially true of aluminum, used in cans, and precious metals, found in discarded electronics.[120] Furthermore, waste after 15 years has still not broken down, so less processing would be required when compared to mining ores. A study undertaken by Cranfield University has found £360 million of metals could be mined from just four landfill sites.[121] There is also up to 20 MJ/kg of energy in waste, potentially making the re-extraction more profitable.[122] However, although the first landfill mine opened in Tel Aviv, Israel in 1953, little work has followed due to the abundance of accessible ores.[123]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Definition of ORE". www.merriam-webster.com. Retrieved 2023-02-10.
  2. ^ Agricola, Georg; Hoover, Herbert (1950). De re metallica. MBLWHOI Library. New York, Dover Publications.
  3. ^ Hartman, Howard L. SME Mining Engineering Handbook, Society for Mining, Metallurgy, and Exploration Inc, 1992, p. 3.
  4. ^ J. Theo Kloprogge; Concepcion P. Ponce; Tom Loomis (18 November 2020). The Periodic Table: Nature's Building Blocks: An Introduction to the Naturally Occurring Elements, Their Origins and Their Uses. Elsevier. p. 54. ISBN 978-0-12-821538-8.
  5. ^ Swaziland Natural Trust Commission, "Cultural Resources – Malolotja Archaeology, Lion Cavern," Retrieved August 27, 2007, . Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2016-02-05.
  6. ^ Peace Parks Foundation, "Major Features: Cultural Importance." Republic of South Africa: Author. Retrieved August 27, 2007, [1] 2008-12-07 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ "ASA – October 1996: Mining and Religion in Ancient Man". www2.asa3.org. Retrieved 2015-06-11.
  8. ^ Shaw, I. (2000). The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt. New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 57–59.
  9. ^ a b Shaw, I. (2000). The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt. New York: Oxford University Press, p. 108.
  10. ^ Shaw, Ian (March 1994). "Pharaonic quarrying and mining: settlement and procurement in Egypt's marginal regions". Antiquity. 68 (258): 108–119. doi:10.1017/S0003598X0004624X. ISSN 0003-598X. S2CID 127791320.
  11. ^ AbdelMaksoud, K.M. Al Fawakhir Gold mine as a Geosite, Eastern Desert, Egypt. Int J Earth Sci (Geol Rundsch) 109, 197–199 (2020). https://doi-org.proxy.library.carleton.ca/10.1007/s00531-019-01811-w
  12. ^ Neesse, Thomas (April 2014). "Selective attachment processes in ancient gold ore beneficiation". Minerals Engineering. 58: 52–63. Bibcode:2014MiEng..58...52N. doi:10.1016/j.mineng.2014.01.009.
  13. ^ "Mining greece ancient mines". www.miningreece.com. 2014-12-10. Retrieved 2015-06-11.
  14. ^ "Mining Greece Ancient Quarries in Thassos". www.miningreece.com. 2014-12-10. Retrieved 2015-06-11.
  15. ^ "Mining Greece the Goldmines of Alexander the Great". www.miningreece.com. 2014-12-10. Retrieved 2015-06-11.
  16. ^ Calvo, Miguel (2003). Minerales y Minas de España. Vol. II. Sulfuros y sulfosales. Vitoria, Spain: Museo de Ciencias Naturales de Alava. pp. 205–335. ISBN 84-7821-543-3.
  17. ^ . News.independent.co.uk. 2007-01-20. Archived from the original on July 6, 2008. Retrieved 2013-06-22.
  18. ^ . romans-in-britain.org.uk. Archived from the original on July 20, 2010.
  19. ^ A culture of Improvement. Robert Friedel. MIT Press. 2007. p. 81
  20. ^ . Mygeologypage.ucdavis.edu. Archived from the original on 2013-07-14. Retrieved 2013-06-22.
  21. ^ Heaton Herbert (1948) Economic History of Europe. A Harper International Edition. Fifth printing. February 1968. p. 316
  22. ^ Heiss, Andreas G.; Oeggl, Klaus (2008). "Analysis of the fuel wood used in Late Bronze Age and Early Iron Age copper mining sites of the Schwaz and Brixlegg area (Tyrol, Austria)". Vegetation History and Archaeobotany. 17 (2): 211–21. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.156.1683. doi:10.1007/s00334-007-0096-8. S2CID 15636432.
  23. ^ The use of Firesetting in the Granite Quarries of South India Paul T. Craddock The Bulletin of the Peak District Mines Historical Society, Vol. 13 Number 1. 1996
  24. ^ "The Spanish Tradition in Gold and Silver Mining." Otis E. Young Arizona and the West, Vol. 7, No. 4 (Winter, 1965), pp. 299–314 (Journal of the Southwest) JSTOR 40167137.
  25. ^ "The Trans-Saharan Gold Trade (7th–14th Century)". The Metropolitan Museum. October 2000. Retrieved 7 July 2022.
  26. ^ Published by M. Garside (2021-10-20). "Mining industry in Africa - statistics & facts". Statista. Retrieved 2022-03-19.
  27. ^ Fiji through the Prism of Geology and Mines Inspection. Chapter 5 in: White F. (2020). Miner with a Heart of Gold: biography of a mineral science and engineering educator. Friesen Press, Victoria. ISBN 978-1-5255-7765-9 (Hardcover) 978-1-5255-7766-6 (Paperback) 978-1-5255-7767-3 (eBook)
  28. ^ a b Lankton, L. (1991). Cradle to Grave: Life, Work, and Death at the Lake Superior Copper Mines. New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 5–6.
  29. ^ a b c West, G.A. (1970). Copper: its mining and use by the aborigines of the Lake Superior Region. Westport, Conn: Greenwood Press.
  30. ^ a b Ricard, T. A. (1932), A History of American Mining, McGraw-Hill Book Company.
  31. ^ Vaden, H.E. & Prevost. G. (2002). Politics of Latin America: The Power Game. New York: Oxford University Press, p. 34.
  32. ^ Maynard, S.R., Lisenbee, A.L. & Rogers, J. (2002). Preliminary Geologic Map of the Picture Rock 7.5 – Minute Quadrangle Santa Fe County, Central New Mexico. New Mexico Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources, Open-File Report DM-49.
  33. ^ The Cerrillos Hills Park Coalition, (2000). Cerrillos Hills Historic Park Vision Statement. Public documents: Author. Retrieved August 27, 2007, [2]. August 1, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  34. ^ The WPA Guide to Wisconsin: The Badger State, Federal Writers' Project, Trinity University Press, Wisconsin, USA, 2013, p. 451. Retrieved November 15, 2018.
  35. ^ McClure R, Schneider A. The General Mining Act of 1872 has left a legacy of riches and ruin. Seattle PI.
  36. ^ Boorstin, D.J. (1965). The Americans: The National Experience. New York: Vintage Books, pp. 78–81.
  37. ^ "Mining in the West Development Articles and Essays Meeting of Frontiers Digital Collections Library of Congress". Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA. Retrieved 27 September 2022.
  38. ^ a b Miller C. (2013). Atlas of US and Canadian Environmental History, p. 64. Taylor & Francis.
  39. ^ History of Australia's Minerals Industry. Australian Atlas of Minerals Processing, Mines, and & Processing Centres.
  40. ^ a b c "12.9: Mining". Geosciences LibreTexts. 2017-01-28. Retrieved 2023-04-03.
  41. ^ McGill University. Sunset of a Transformational Career. Chapter 16 in: White F. Miner with a Heart of Gold: biography of a mineral science and engineering educator. Friesen Press, Victoria. 2020. ISBN 978-1-5255-7765-9 (Hardcover) 978-1-5255-7766-6 (Paperback) 978-1-5255-7767-3 (eBook)
  42. ^ Hartmann HL. Introductory Mining Engineering, p. 11. First chapter.
  43. ^ . World-nuclear.org. Archived from the original on 2010-08-17. Retrieved 2013-06-22.
  44. ^ a b Bajpayee, T.S.; Rehak, T.R.; Mowrey, G.L.; Ingram, D.K. (January 2004). "Blasting injuries in surface mining with emphasis on flyrock and blast area security". Journal of Safety Research. 35 (1): 47–57. doi:10.1016/j.jsr.2003.07.003. ISSN 0022-4375. PMID 14992846.
  45. ^ Wegner, Jan Helen (2010-06-22). "BLASTING OUT: EXPLOSIVES PRACTICES IN QUEENSLAND METALLIFEROUS MINES, 1870-1920: Blasting out". Australian Economic History Review. 50 (2): 193–208. doi:10.1111/j.1467-8446.2010.00301.x.
  46. ^ "Artisanal and Small-Scale Mining". Intergovernmental Forum. Retrieved 2023-03-30.
  47. ^ "Addressing Forced Labor in Artisanal and Small-scale Mining (ASM)" (PDF). responsiblemines.org. 2014. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  48. ^ "Global Trends in Artisanal and Small-Scale Mining (ASM): A review of key numbers and issues". IISD. 2018-01-20. Retrieved 2018-10-26.
  49. ^ "Women and Artisanal Mining: Gender Roles and the Road Ahead" (PDF). siteresources.worldbank.org. Retrieved 26 October 2018.
  50. ^ Landfill Mining Landfill Mining, Preserving Resources through Integrated Sustainable Management of Waste, Technical Brief from the World Resource Foundation
  51. ^ Krook, Joakim; Svensson, Niclas; Eklund, Mats (2012-03-01). "Landfill mining: A critical review of two decades of research". Waste Management. 32 (3): 513–20. Bibcode:2012WaMan..32..513K. doi:10.1016/j.wasman.2011.10.015. ISSN 0956-053X. PMID 22083108.
  52. ^ Drum, The Oil (November 26, 2010), Coal Mining and the Highwall Method, A Media Solutions
  53. ^ Harraz, Hassan Z. (2010). "Underground mining Methods". doi:10.13140/RG.2.1.2881.1124. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  54. ^ "Metallurgy - Extractive metallurgy". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2021-06-04.
  55. ^ . Red Meters. Archived from the original on 2021-06-25. Retrieved 2021-03-29.
  56. ^ "Minerals Mining Conveyors | Mineral Mining Conveyor Products". ASGCO. Retrieved 2023-04-03.
  57. ^ Leotaud, V. R. "Scientists develop technique to reduce cost, environmental impact of mining precious metal", by Valentina Ruiz LeotaudMining.com, June 10, 2018.
  58. ^ Laura J., Sonter (December 5, 2018). "Mining and biodiversity: key issues and research needs in conservation science". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 285 (1892): 20181926. doi:10.1098/rspb.2018.1926. PMC 6283941. PMID 30518573.
  59. ^ a b c d e f Moody R. (2007). Rocks and Hard Places. Zed Books.
  60. ^ Abrahams D. (2005). Regulations for Corporations: A historical account of TNC regulation 2011-10-01 at the Wayback Machine, p. 6. UNRISD.
  61. ^ Chapin, Mac (2004-10-15). . World Watch Magazine. 6. 17. Archived from the original on 2010-08-02. Retrieved 2010-02-18.
  62. ^ Bloom, M.J. & Denison, M. (2012) Environmental management for extractives, PROFESSIONAL EVIDENCE AND APPLIED KNOWLEDGE SERVICES http://partnerplatform.org/?zl177g4a
  63. ^ Zvereva, V. P.; Frolov, K. R.; Lysenko, A. I. (2021-10-13). "Chemical reactions and conditions of mineral formation at tailings storage facilities of the Russian Far East". Gornye Nauki I Tekhnologii = Mining Science and Technology (Russia). 6 (3): 181–191. doi:10.17073/2500-0632-2021-3-181-191. ISSN 2500-0632. S2CID 243263530.
  64. ^ "What is the Cost of Mining Gold?". Visual Capitalist. 2013-05-21. Retrieved 2015-06-11.
  65. ^ a b c US EPA. (1994). Technical Report: Design and Evaluation of Tailings Dams[dead link].
  66. ^ a b c TE Martin, MP Davies. (2000). Trends in the stewardship of tailings dams.
  67. ^ "Exclusive: Barrick faces sanctions for Argentina cyanide spills". Reuters. 2017-05-08.
  68. ^ Leppänen, Jaakko Johannes; Weckström, Jan; Korhola, Atte (2017-09-05). "Multiple mining impacts induce widespread changes in ecosystem dynamics in a boreal lake". Scientific Reports. 7 (1): 10581. Bibcode:2017NatSR...710581L. doi:10.1038/s41598-017-11421-8. ISSN 2045-2322. PMC 5585241. PMID 28874843.
  69. ^ Coumans C. (2002). Mining's Problem with Waste 2017-07-06 at the Wayback Machine. MiningWatch Canada.
  70. ^ a b c d MacDonald A. (2002). Industry in Transition: A Profile of the North American Mining Sector 2011-07-28 at the Wayback Machine. Free full-text 2013-09-15 at the Wayback Machine
  71. ^ Reuters. Global stock values top $50 trln: industry data.
  72. ^ Environmental Effects of Foreign Investment Versus Domestic Investment in the Mining Sector In Latin-America. OECD.
  73. ^ . Mbendi.
  74. ^ China's Continuing Monopoly Over Rare Earth Minerals. U.S. News & World Report.
  75. ^ ESMD, US Census Bureau Classification Development Branch. "US Census Bureau Site North American Industry Classification System main page". www.census.gov. Retrieved 2018-07-19.
  76. ^ Swenson JJ, Carter CE, Domec J-C, Delgado CI (2011) Gold Mining in the Peruvian Amazon: Global Prices, Deforestation, and Mercury Imports. PLoS ONE 6(4): e18875. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0018875. Lay summary: Amazon Gold Fever Comes with a High Environmental Cost 2013-03-09 at the Wayback Machine
  77. ^ . Metals Economics Group Inc. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-08-03. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
  78. ^ Cambell, Bonnie (2008). "Regulation & Legitimacy in the Mining Industry in Africa: Where does" (PDF). Review of African Political Economy. 35 (3): 367–89. doi:10.1080/03056240802410984. S2CID 154670334. Retrieved 7 April 2011.
  79. ^ a b c d (PDF). The World Bank. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-04-17. Retrieved 4 April 2011.
  80. ^ Do Canadian mining companies operating abroad face weaker environmental regulations? 2018-07-06 at the Wayback Machine. MiningFacts.org. Fraser Institute.
  81. ^ Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative. "Governance Structure". Retrieved 4 April 2011.
  82. ^ Business and Human Right Resource Centre (2009). . Archived from the original on 8 April 2011. Retrieved 6 April 2011. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  83. ^ The Ghanaian Journal. "At the Fifth EITI Global Conference". Retrieved 3 April 2011.
  84. ^ Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 July 2011. Retrieved 4 April 2011.
  85. ^ a b World Bank's Oil, Gas and Mining Policy and Operations Unit (COCPO). "Advancing the EITI in the Mining Sector: Implementation Issues" (PDF). Retrieved 6 April 2011. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  86. ^ Revenue Watch Institute 2010. . Archived from the original on July 20, 2011. Retrieved 6 April 2011.
  87. ^ For an overview of the Bank and mining, see Mining, Sustainability and Risk:World Bank Group Experiences 2011-09-29 at the Wayback Machine
  88. ^ See the 1995 World Development 23(3) pp. 385–400.
  89. ^ GRAMA. (2003). The Challenges of Development, Mining Codes in Africa And Corporate Responsibility. In: International and Comparative Mineral Law and Policy: Trends and Prospects. Summarized in the African Mining Codes Questioned. January 1, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  90. ^ "Marcel Barrois". Le Monde (in French). March 10, 2006.[permanent dead link]
  91. ^ "". Time. March 2, 2007
  92. ^ Wegner, Jan Helen (2010-06-22). "BLASTING OUT: EXPLOSIVES PRACTICES IN QUEENSLAND METALLIFEROUS MINES, 1870-1920: Blasting out". Australian Economic History Review. 50 (2): 193–208. doi:10.1111/j.1467-8446.2010.00301.x.
  93. ^ "NORA Mining Sector Council | NIOSH | CDC". www.cdc.gov. 2017-10-24. Retrieved 2018-02-22.
  94. ^ "Mission | Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA)". www.msha.gov. Retrieved 2018-07-19.
  95. ^ Masterson, Elizabeth A.; Deddens, James A.; Themann, Christa L.; Bertke, Stephen; Calvert, Geoffrey M. (April 2015). "Trends in worker hearing loss by industry sector, 1981–2010". American Journal of Industrial Medicine. 58 (4): 392–401. doi:10.1002/ajim.22429. ISSN 1097-0274. PMC 4557728. PMID 25690583.
  96. ^ "Summary of Longwall and Continuous Miner Section Noise Studies in Underground Coal Mines". www.cdc.gov. 25 October 2016. Retrieved 2018-07-19.
  97. ^ "Worker exposure and equipment noise in large surface coal mines". www.cdc.gov. Retrieved 2018-07-19.
  98. ^ Sun, Kan; Azman, Amanda S. (March 2018). "Evaluating hearing loss risks in the mining industry through MSHA citations". Journal of Occupational and Environmental Hygiene. 15 (3): 246–62. doi:10.1080/15459624.2017.1412584. ISSN 1545-9632. PMC 5848488. PMID 29200378.
  99. ^ Spohr, Maximilian (January 2016). (PDF). BGR. p. 10. Archived from the original (PDF) on 31 October 2020. Retrieved 28 December 2020.
  100. ^ Tamufor, Lindlyn. (PDF). Ghana: Third World Network - Africa. p. 9. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 August 2021. Retrieved 28 December 2020.
  101. ^ Financial Times (7 July 2019). "Congo, Child Labor and Your Electric Car". Financial Times. Archived from the original on 2022-12-10.
  102. ^ Kelly, Annie (16 December 2019). "Apple and Google named in US lawsuit over Congolese child cobalt mining deaths". The Guardian. Retrieved 18 January 2021.
  103. ^ Marshall, Claire (2021-09-13). "Record number of environmental activists murdered". BBC via Yahoo News. Retrieved 2021-09-13.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  104. ^ Behrendt, Larissa; Strelein, Lisa (March 2001). "Old Habits Die Hard: Indigenous Land Rights and Mining in Australia". Cultural Survival. Retrieved 2021-09-13.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  105. ^ "Uranium Mining – The Gundjeihmi Aboriginal Corporation". Mirarr. Retrieved 2021-09-13.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  106. ^ a b Tartlet, R.K. (March 2001). "The Cordillera People's Alliance: Mining and Indigenous Rights in the Luzon Highlands". Cultural Surival. Retrieved 2021-09-13.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  107. ^ Phillips, Tom; Milhorance, Flávia (2021-09-10). "Indigenous warrior women take fight to save ancestral lands to Brazilian capital". The Guardian. Retrieved 2021-09-13.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  108. ^ "Brazil: Supreme Court must uphold indigenous land rights – UN expert". UN OHCHR. 2021-08-23. Retrieved 2021-09-13.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  109. ^ "Mining and minerals in South Africa". SouthAfrica.info. 8 August 2012. Retrieved 13 August 2012.
  110. ^ "Mineral deposits: from their origin to their environmental impacts". Taylor & Francis. January 1995. ISBN 9789054105503.
  111. ^ "Chuquicamata | MINING.com". 2012-07-17. Retrieved 2015-06-11.
  112. ^ . 2015-04-06. Archived from the original on April 6, 2015. Retrieved 2015-06-11.
  113. ^ . www.texreport.co.jp. Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2015-06-11.
  114. ^ "Nordrhein-Westfalen in Zahlen und Geodaten" (PDF).
  115. ^ Piesing, Mark. "The deepest hole we have ever dug". www.bbc.com. Retrieved 2021-05-04.
  116. ^ a b The Recycling Rates of Metals: A Status Report 2010, International Resource Panel, United Nations Environment Programme
  117. ^ Tread lightly: Aluminium attack Carolyn Fry, Guardian.co.uk, 22 February 2008.
  118. ^ Metal Stocks in Society: Scientific Synthesis 2010, International Resource Panel, United Nations Environment Programme
  119. ^ (PDF). MacFarlanes. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-06-13. Retrieved 2015-06-11.
  120. ^ "Landfill Mining". www.enviroalternatives.com. Retrieved 2015-06-11.
  121. ^ . www.rebnews.com. Archived from the original on 2015-06-12. Retrieved 2015-06-11.
  122. ^ (PDF). Enhanced Landfill Mining. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-06-12. Retrieved 2015-06-11.
  123. ^ "Assessing the opportunities of landfill mining". www.rug.nl. Research database – University of Groningen. Retrieved 2015-06-11.

Further reading

  • Woytinsky, W.S., and E.S. Woytinsky (1953). World Population and Production Trends and Outlooks, pp. 749–881; with many tables and maps on the worldwide mining industry in 1950, including coal, metals and minerals
  • Ali, Saleem H. (2003). Mining, the Environment and Indigenous Development Conflicts. Tucson AZ: University of Arizona Press.[ISBN missing]
  • Ali, Saleem H. (2009). Treasures of the Earth: need, greed and a sustainable future. New Haven and London: Yale University Press.[ISBN missing]
  • Even-Zohar, Chaim (2002). From Mine to Mistress: Corporate Strategies and Government Policies in the International Diamond Industry. Mining Journal Books. p. 555. ISBN 978-0-9537336-1-3.
  • Geobacter Project: (in PDF format)
  • Garrett, Dennis. Alaska Placer Mining.[ISBN missing]
  • Jayanta, Bhattacharya (2007). Principles of Mine Planning (2nd ed.). Wide Publishing. p. 505. ISBN 978-81-7764-480-7.
  • Morrison, Tom (1992). Hardrock Gold: a miner's tale. ISBN 0-8061-2442-3
  • John Milne. The Miner's Handbook: A Handy Reference on the subjects of Mineral Deposits (1894) Mining operations in the 19th century. The Miner's Handbook: A Handy Book of Reference on the Subjects of Mineral Deposits, Mining Operations, Ore Dressing, Etc. For the Use of Students and Others Interested in Mining Matters.
  • Aryee, B., Ntibery, B., Atorkui, E. (2003). "Trends in the small-scale mining of precious minerals in Ghana: a perspective on its environmental impact", Journal of Cleaner Production 11: 131–40.
  • Temple, John (1972). Mining: An International History. Ernest Benn Limited.
  • The Oil, gas and Mining Sustainable Community Development Fund (2009). Social Mine Closure Strategy, Mali (in ).
  • White F. (2020). Miner with a Heart of Gold: biography of a mineral science and engineering educator. Friesen Press, Victoria. ISBN 978-1-5255-7765-9 (Hardcover), 978-1-5255-7766-6 (Paperback), 978-1-5255-7767-3 (eBook).

External links


mining, underground, mining, redirects, here, other, uses, underground, mining, soft, rock, underground, mining, hard, rock, other, uses, disambiguation, extraction, valuable, geological, materials, from, earth, other, astronomical, objects, required, obtain, . Underground mining redirects here For other uses see Underground mining soft rock and Underground mining hard rock For other uses see Mining disambiguation Mining is the extraction of valuable geological materials from the Earth and other astronomical objects Mining is required to obtain most materials that cannot be grown through agricultural processes or feasibly created artificially in a laboratory or factory Ores recovered by mining include metals coal oil shale gemstones limestone chalk dimension stone rock salt potash gravel and clay Ore must be a rock or mineral that contains valuable constituent can be extracted or mined and sold for profit 1 Mining in a wider sense includes extraction of any non renewable resource such as petroleum natural gas or even water Mining of sulfur from a deposit at the edge of Ijen s crater lake Modern mining processes involve prospecting for ore bodies analysis of the profit potential of a proposed mine extraction of the desired materials and final reclamation or restoration of the land after the mine is closed 2 Mining materials are often obtained from ore bodies lodes veins seams reefs or placer deposits The exploitation of these deposits for raw material is dependent on investment labor energy refine and transportation cost Mining operations can create a negative environmental impact both during the mining activity and after the mine has closed Hence most of the world s nations have passed regulations to decrease the impact however the outsized role of mining in generating business for often rural remote or economically depressed communities means that governments often fail to fully enforce such regulations Work safety has long been a concern as well and where enforced modern practices have significantly improved safety in mines Unregulated or poorly regulated mining especially in developing economies frequently contributes to local human rights violations and environmental conflicts Mining can also perpetuate political instability through resource conflicts Contents 1 History 1 1 Prehistory 1 2 Ancient Egypt 1 3 Ancient Greece and Rome 1 4 Medieval Europe 1 5 Africa 1 6 Oceania 1 7 Americas 1 8 Modernity 2 Mine development and life cycle 3 Techniques 3 1 Artisanal 3 2 Surface 3 3 High wall 3 4 Underground mining 4 Machines 5 Processing 6 Environmental effects 6 1 Environmental regulation 6 2 Waste 7 Industry 7 1 Corporate classifications 7 2 Regulation and governance 7 3 World Bank 8 Safety 9 Human rights 9 1 Child labor 9 2 Indigenous peoples 10 Records 11 Metal reserves and recycling 12 See also 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksHistory EditPrehistory Edit Since the beginning of civilization people have used stone clay and later metals found close to the Earth s surface These were used to make early tools and weapons for example high quality flint found in northern France southern England and Poland was used to create flint tools 3 Flint mines have been found in chalk areas where seams of the stone were followed underground by shafts and galleries The mines at Grimes Graves and Krzemionki are especially famous and like most other flint mines are Neolithic in origin c 4000 3000 BC Other hard rocks mined or collected for axes included the greenstone of the Langdale axe industry based in the English Lake District 4 The oldest known mine on archaeological record is the Ngwenya Mine in Eswatini Swaziland which radiocarbon dating shows to be about 43 000 years old At this site Paleolithic humans mined hematite to make the red pigment ochre 5 6 Mines of a similar age in Hungary are believed to be sites where Neanderthals may have mined flint for weapons and tools 7 Ancient Egypt Edit Malachite Ancient Egyptians mined malachite at Maadi 8 At first Egyptians used the bright green malachite stones for ornamentations and pottery Later between 2613 and 2494 BC large building projects required expeditions abroad to the area of Wadi Maghareh in order to secure minerals and other resources not available in Egypt itself 9 Quarries for turquoise and copper were also found at Wadi Hammamat Tura Aswan and various other Nubian sites on the Sinai Peninsula and at Timna 9 Quarries for gypsum were found at the Umm el Sawwan site gypsum was used to make funerary items for private tombs Other minerals mined in Egypt from the Old Kingdom 2649 2134 BC until the Roman Period 30 BC AD 395 including granite sandstone limestone basalt travertine gneiss galena and amethyst 10 Mining in Egypt occurred in the earliest dynasties The gold mines of Nubia were among the largest and most extensive of any in Ancient Egypt These mines are described by the Greek author Diodorus Siculus who mentions fire setting as one method used to break down the hard rock holding the gold One of the complexes is shown in one of the earliest known mining maps 11 The miners crushed the ore and ground it to a fine powder before washing the powder for the gold dust known as the dry and wet attachment processes 12 Ancient Greece and Rome Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Further information Mining in Roman Britain Ancient Roman development of the Dolaucothi Gold Mines Wales Mining in Europe has a very long history Examples include the silver mines of Laurium which helped support the Greek city state of Athens Although they had over 20 000 slaves working them their technology was essentially identical to their Bronze Age predecessors 13 At other mines such as on the island of Thassos marble was quarried by the Parians after they arrived in the 7th century BC 14 The marble was shipped away and was later found by archaeologists to have been used in buildings including the tomb of Amphipolis Philip II of Macedon the father of Alexander the Great captured the gold mines of Mount Pangeo in 357 BC to fund his military campaigns 15 He also captured gold mines in Thrace for minting coinage eventually producing 26 tons per year However it was the Romans who developed large scale mining methods especially the use of large volumes of water brought to the minehead by numerous aqueducts The water was used for a variety of purposes including removing overburden and rock debris called hydraulic mining as well as washing comminuted or crushed ores and driving simple machinery The Romans used hydraulic mining methods on a large scale to prospect for the veins of ore especially using a now obsolete form of mining known as hushing They built numerous aqueducts to supply water to the minehead where the water was stored in large reservoirs and tanks When a full tank was opened the flood of water sluiced away the overburden to expose the bedrock underneath and any gold bearing veins The rock was then worked by fire setting to heat the rock which would be quenched with a stream of water The resulting thermal shock cracked the rock enabling it to be removed by further streams of water from the overhead tanks The Roman miners used similar methods to work cassiterite deposits in Cornwall and lead ore in the Pennines Sluicing methods were developed by the Romans in Spain in 25 AD to exploit large alluvial gold deposits the largest site being at Las Medulas where seven long aqueducts tapped local rivers and sluiced the deposits The Romans also exploited the silver present in the argentiferous galena in the mines of Cartagena Cartago Nova Linares Castulo Plasenzuela and Azuaga among many others 16 Spain was one of the most important mining regions but all regions of the Roman Empire were exploited In Great Britain the natives had mined minerals for millennia 17 but after the Roman conquest the scale of the operations increased dramatically as the Romans needed Britannia s resources especially gold silver tin and lead Roman techniques were not limited to surface mining They followed the ore veins underground once opencast mining was no longer feasible At Dolaucothi they stoped out the veins and drove adits through bare rock to drain the stopes The same adits were also used to ventilate the workings especially important when fire setting was used At other parts of the site they penetrated the water table and dewatered the mines using several kinds of machines especially reverse overshot water wheels These were used extensively in the copper mines at Rio Tinto in Spain where one sequence comprised 16 such wheels arranged in pairs and lifting water about 24 metres 79 ft They were worked as treadmills with miners standing on the top slats Many examples of such devices have been found in old Roman mines and some examples are now preserved in the British Museum and the National Museum of Wales 18 Medieval Europe Edit Main article Mining and metallurgy in medieval Europe Agricola author of De Re Metallica Gallery 12th to 13th century Germany Mining as an industry underwent dramatic changes in medieval Europe The mining industry in the early Middle Ages was mainly focused on the extraction of copper and iron Other precious metals were also used mainly for gilding or coinage Initially many metals were obtained through open pit mining and ore was primarily extracted from shallow depths rather than through deep mine shafts Around the 14th century the growing use of weapons armour stirrups and horseshoes greatly increased the demand for iron Medieval knights for example were often laden with up to 100 pounds 45 kg of plate or chain link armour in addition to swords lances and other weapons 19 The overwhelming dependency on iron for military purposes spurred iron production and extraction processes The silver crisis of 1465 occurred when all mines had reached depths at which the shafts could no longer be pumped dry with the available technology 20 Although an increased use of banknotes credit and copper coins during this period did decrease the value of and dependence on precious metals gold and silver still remained vital to the story of medieval mining Due to differences in the social structure of society the increasing extraction of mineral deposits spread from central Europe to England in the mid sixteenth century On the continent mineral deposits belonged to the crown and this regalian right was stoutly maintained But in England royal mining rights were restricted to gold and silver of which England had virtually no deposits by a judicial decision of 1568 and a law in 1688 England had iron zinc copper lead and tin ores Landlords who owned the base metals and coal under their estates then had a strong inducement to extract these metals or to lease the deposits and collect royalties from mine operators English German and Dutch capital combined to finance extraction and refining Hundreds of German technicians and skilled workers were brought over in 1642 a colony of 4 000 foreigners was mining and smelting copper at Keswick in the northwestern mountains 21 Use of water power in the form of water mills was extensive The water mills were employed in crushing ore raising ore from shafts and ventilating galleries by powering giant bellows Black powder was first used in mining in Selmecbanya Kingdom of Hungary now Banska Stiavnica Slovakia in 1627 22 Black powder allowed blasting of rock and earth to loosen and reveal ore veins Blasting was much faster than fire setting and allowed the mining of previously impenetrable metals and ores 23 In 1762 the world s first mining academy was established in the same town there The widespread adoption of agricultural innovations such as the iron plowshare as well as the growing use of metal as a building material was also a driving force in the tremendous growth of the iron industry during this period Inventions like the arrastra were often used by the Spanish to pulverize ore after being mined This device was powered by animals and used the same principles used for grain threshing 24 Much of the knowledge of medieval mining techniques comes from books such as Biringuccio s De la pirotechnia and probably most importantly from Georg Agricola s De re metallica 1556 These books detail many different mining methods used in German and Saxon mines A prime issue in medieval mines which Agricola explains in detail was the removal of water from mining shafts As miners dug deeper to access new veins flooding became a very real obstacle The mining industry became dramatically more efficient and prosperous with the invention of mechanically and animal driven pumps Africa Edit Iron metallurgy in Africa dates back over four thousand years Gold became an important commodity for Africa during the trans Saharan gold trade from the 7th century to the 14th century Gold was often traded to Mediterranean economies that demanded gold and could supply salt even though much of Africa was abundant with salt due to the mines and resources in the Sahara desert The trading of gold for salt was mostly used to promote trade between the different economies 25 Since the 19th century gold and diamond mining in Southern Africa has had major political and economic impacts The Democratic Republic of Congo is the largest producer of diamonds in Africa with an estimated 12 million carats in 2019 Other types of mining reserves in Africa include cobalt bauxite iron ore coal and copper 26 Oceania Edit Gold and coal mining started in Australia and New Zealand in the 19th century Nickel has become important in the economy of New Caledonia In Fiji in 1934 the Emperor Gold Mining Company Ltd established operations at Vatukoula followed in 1935 by the Loloma Gold Mines N L and then by Fiji Mines Development Ltd aka Dolphin Mines Ltd These developments ushered in a mining boom with gold production rising more than a hundred fold from 931 4 oz in 1934 to 107 788 5 oz in 1939 an order of magnitude then comparable to the combined output of New Zealand and Australia s eastern states 27 Americas Edit Lead mining in the upper Mississippi River region of the U S 1865During prehistoric times early Americans mined large amounts of copper along Lake Superior s Keweenaw Peninsula and in nearby Isle Royale metallic copper was still present near the surface in colonial times 28 29 30 Indigenous peoples used Lake Superior copper from at least 5 000 years ago 28 copper tools arrowheads and other artifacts that were part of an extensive native trade network have been discovered In addition obsidian flint and other minerals were mined worked and traded 29 Early French explorers who encountered the sites clarification needed made no use of the metals due to the difficulties of transporting them 29 but the copper was eventually when traded throughout the continent along major river routes citation needed Miners at the Tamarack Mine in Copper Country Michigan U S in 1905 In the early colonial history of the Americas native gold and silver was quickly expropriated and sent back to Spain in fleets of gold and silver laden galleons 31 the gold and silver originating mostly from mines in Central and South America Turquoise dated at 700 AD was mined in pre Columbian America in the Cerillos Mining District in New Mexico an estimate of about 15 000 tons of rock had been removed from Mt Chalchihuitl using stone tools before 1700 32 33 In 1727 Louis Denys Denis 1675 1741 sieur de La Ronde brother of Simon Pierre Denys de Bonaventure and the son in law of Rene Chartier took command of Fort La Pointe at Chequamegon Bay where natives informed him of an island of copper La Ronde obtained permission from the French crown to operate mines in 1733 becoming the first practical miner on Lake Superior seven years later mining was halted by an outbreak between Sioux and Chippewa tribes 34 Mining in the United States became widespread in the 19th century and the United States Congress passed the General Mining Act of 1872 to encourage mining of federal lands 35 As with the California Gold Rush in the mid 19th century mining for minerals and precious metals along with ranching became a driving factor in the U S Westward Expansion to the Pacific coast With the exploration of the West mining camps sprang up and expressed a distinctive spirit an enduring legacy to the new nation Gold Rushers would experience the same problems as the Land Rushers of the transient West that preceded them 36 Aided by railroads many people traveled West for work opportunities in mining Western cities such as Denver and Sacramento originated as mining towns 37 When new areas were explored it was usually the gold placer and then lode and then silver that were taken into possession and extracted first Other metals would often wait for railroads or canals as coarse gold dust and nuggets do not require smelting and are easy to identify and transport 30 Modernity Edit View showing miners clothes suspended by pulleys also wash basins and ventilation system Kirkland Lake Ontario 1936 In the early 20th century the gold and silver rush to the western United States also stimulated mining for coal as well as base metals such as copper lead and iron Areas in modern Montana Utah Arizona and later Alaska became predominate suppliers of copper to the world which was increasingly demanding copper for electrical and households goods 38 Canada s mining industry grew more slowly than did the United States due to limitations in transportation capital and U S competition Ontario was the major producer of the early 20th century with nickel copper and gold 38 Meanwhile Australia experienced the Australian gold rushes and by the 1850s was producing 40 of the world s gold followed by the establishment of large mines such as the Mount Morgan Mine which ran for nearly a hundred years Broken Hill ore deposit one of the largest zinc lead ore deposits and the iron ore mines at Iron Knob After declines in production another boom in mining occurred in the 1960s Now in the early 21st century Australia remains a major world mineral producer 39 As the 21st century begins a globalized mining industry of large multinational corporations has arisen Peak minerals and environmental impacts have also become a concern Different elements particularly rare earth minerals have begun to increase in demand as a result of new technologies 40 Mine development and life cycle Edit Schematic of a cut and fill mining operation in hard rock The process of mining from discovery of an ore body through extraction of minerals and finally to returning the land to its natural state consists of several distinct steps The first is discovery of the ore body which is carried out through prospecting or exploration to find and then define the extent location and value of the ore body This leads to a mathematical resource estimation to estimate the size and grade of the deposit This estimation is used to conduct a pre feasibility study to determine the theoretical economics of the ore deposit This identifies early on whether further investment in estimation and engineering studies is warranted and identifies key risks and areas for further work The next step is to conduct a feasibility study to evaluate the financial viability the technical and financial risks and the robustness of the project This is when the mining company makes the decision whether to develop the mine or to walk away from the project This includes mine planning to evaluate the economically recoverable portion of the deposit the metallurgy and ore recoverability marketability and payability of the ore concentrates engineering concerns milling and infrastructure costs finance and equity requirements and an analysis of the proposed mine from the initial excavation all the way through to reclamation The proportion of a deposit that is economically recoverable is dependent on the enrichment factor of the ore in the area To gain access to the mineral deposit within an area it is often necessary to mine through or remove waste material which is not of immediate interest to the miner The total movement of ore and waste constitutes the mining process Often more waste than ore is mined during the life of a mine depending on the nature and location of the ore body Waste removal and placement is a major cost to the mining operator so a detailed characterization of the waste material forms an essential part of the geological exploration program for a mining operation Once the analysis determines a given ore body is worth recovering development begins to create access to the ore body The mine buildings and processing plants are built and any necessary equipment is obtained The operation of the mine to recover the ore begins and continues as long as the company operating the mine finds it economical to do so Once all the ore that the mine can produce profitably is recovered reclamation can begin to make the land used by the mine suitable for future use Technical and economic challenges notwithstanding successful mine development must also address human factors Working conditions are paramount to success especially with regard to exposures to dusts radiation noise explosives hazards and vibration as well as illumination standards Mining today increasingly must address environmental and community impacts including psychological and sociological dimensions Thus mining educator Frank T M White 1909 1971 broadened the focus to the total environment of mining including reference to community development around mining and how mining is portrayed to an urban society which depends on the industry although seemingly unaware of this dependency He stated I n the past mining engineers have not been called upon to study the psychological sociological and personal problems of their own industry aspects that nowadays are assuming tremendous importance The mining engineer must rapidly expand his knowledge and his influence into these newer fields 41 Techniques Edit Underground longwall mining Mining techniques can be divided into two common excavation types surface mining and sub surface underground mining Today surface mining is much more common and produces for example 85 of minerals excluding petroleum and natural gas in the United States including 98 of metallic ores 42 Targets are divided into two general categories of materials placer deposits consisting of valuable minerals contained within river gravels beach sands and other unconsolidated materials and lode deposits where valuable minerals are found in veins in layers or in mineral grains generally distributed throughout a mass of actual rock Both types of ore deposit placer or lode are mined by both surface and underground methods citation needed Some mining including much of the rare earth elements and uranium mining is done by less common methods such as in situ leaching this technique involves digging neither at the surface nor underground The extraction of target minerals by this technique requires that they be soluble e g potash potassium chloride sodium chloride sodium sulfate which dissolve in water Some minerals such as copper minerals and uranium oxide require acid or carbonate solutions to dissolve 43 Explosives in MiningExplosives have been used in surface mining and sub surface mining to blast out rock and ore intended for processing The most common explosive used in mining is ammonium nitrate 44 Between 1870 and 1920 in Queensland Australia an increase in mining accidents lead to more safety measures surrounding the use of explosives for mining 45 In the United States of America between 1990 and 1999 about 22 3 billion kilograms of explosives were used in mining quarrying and other industries Moreover coal mining used 66 4 nonmetal mining and quarrying 13 5 metal mining 10 4 construction 7 1 and all other users 2 6 44 Artisanal Edit This section is an excerpt from Artisanal mining edit Artisanal gold mines near Dodoma Tanzania Makeshift sails lead fresh air underground An artisanal miner or small scale miner ASM is a subsistence miner who is not officially employed by a mining company but works independently mining minerals using their own resources usually by hand 46 Small scale mining includes enterprises or individuals that employ workers for mining but generally still using manually intensive methods working with hand tools Interior of an artisanal mine near Low s Creek Mpumalanga Province South Africa The human figures exploring this mine show the scale of tunnels driven entirely with hand tools two kilogram 4 4 lb hammer and hand forged scrap steel chisel Artisanal miners often undertake the activity of mining seasonally for example crops are planted in the rainy season and mining is pursued in the dry season However they also frequently travel to mining areas and work year round There are four broad types of ASM permanent artisanal mining seasonal annually migrating during idle agriculture periods rush type massive migration pulled often by commodity price jumps and shock push poverty drive following conflict or natural disasters 47 ASM is an important socio economic sector for the rural poor in many developing nations many of whom have few other options for supporting their families Over 90 of the world s mining workforce are ASM There are an estimated 40 5 million men women and children directly engaged in ASM from over 80 countries in the global south 20 of the global gold supply is produced by the ASM sector as well as 80 of the global gemstone and 20 of global diamond supply and 25 of global tin production 48 More than 150 million depend on ASM for their livelihood 70 80 of small scale miners are informal and approximately 30 are women although this ranges in certain countries and commodities from 5 to 80 49 Surface Edit Main article Surface mining Surface mining is done by removing surface vegetation dirt and bedrock to reach buried ore deposits Techniques of surface mining include open pit mining which is the recovery of materials from an open pit in the ground quarrying identical to open pit mining except that it refers to sand stone and clay strip mining which consists of stripping surface layers off to reveal ore underneath and mountaintop removal commonly associated with coal mining which involves taking the top of a mountain off to reach ore deposits at depth Most placer deposits because they are shallowly buried are mined by surface methods Finally landfill mining involves sites where landfills are excavated and processed 50 Landfill mining has been thought of as a long term solution to methane emissions and local pollution 51 Garzweiler surface mine Germany High wall Edit Coalburg Seam highwall mining at ADDCAR 16 Logan County WV High wall mining which evolved from auger mining is another form of surface mining In high wall mining the remaining part of a coal seam previously exploited by other surface mining techniques has too much overburden to be removed but can still be profitably exploited from the side of the artificial cliff made by previous mining 52 A typical cycle alternates sumping which undercuts the seam and shearing which raises and lowers the cutter head boom to cut the entire height of the coal seam As the coal recovery cycle continues the cutter head is progressively launched further into the coal seam High wall mining can produce thousands of tons of coal in contour strip operations with narrow benches previously mined areas trench mine applications and steep dip seams citation needed Underground mining Edit Main articles Underground mining hard rock and Underground mining soft rock Mantrip used for transporting miners within an underground mine Caterpillar Highwall Miner HW300 Technology Bridging Underground and Open Pit Mining Sub surface mining consists of digging tunnels or shafts into the earth to reach buried ore deposits Ore for processing and waste rock for disposal are brought to the surface through the tunnels and shafts Sub surface mining can be classified by the type of access shafts used and the extraction method or the technique used to reach the mineral deposit Drift mining uses horizontal access tunnels slope mining uses diagonally sloping access shafts and shaft mining uses vertical access shafts Mining in hard and soft rock formations requires different techniques 53 Other methods include shrinkage stope mining which is mining upward creating a sloping underground room long wall mining which is grinding a long ore surface underground and room and pillar mining which is removing ore from rooms while leaving pillars in place to support the roof of the room Room and pillar mining often leads to retreat mining in which supporting pillars are removed as miners retreat allowing the room to cave in thereby loosening more ore Additional sub surface mining methods include hard rock mining bore hole mining drift and fill mining long hole slope mining sub level caving and block caving citation needed Machines Edit The Bagger 288 is a bucket wheel excavator used in strip mining It is also one of the largest land vehicles of all time A Bucyrus Erie 2570 dragline and CAT 797 haul truck at the North Antelope Rochelle opencut coal mine Heavy machinery is used in mining to explore and develop sites to remove and stockpile overburden to break and remove rocks of various hardness and toughness to process the ore and to carry out reclamation projects after the mine is closed Bulldozers drills explosives and trucks are all necessary for excavating the land In the case of placer mining unconsolidated gravel or alluvium is fed into machinery consisting of a hopper and a shaking screen or trommel which frees the desired minerals from the waste gravel The minerals are then concentrated using sluices or jigs citation needed Large drills are used to sink shafts excavate stopes and obtain samples for analysis Trams are used to transport miners minerals and waste Lifts carry miners into and out of mines and move rock and ore out and machinery in and out of underground mines Huge trucks shovels and cranes are employed in surface mining to move large quantities of overburden and ore Processing plants use large crushers mills reactors roasters and other equipment to consolidate the mineral rich material and extract the desired compounds and metals from the ore citation needed Processing EditMain articles Mineral processing and Extractive metallurgy Once the mineral is extracted it is often then processed The science of extractive metallurgy is a specialized area in the science of metallurgy that studies the extraction of valuable metals from their ores especially through chemical or mechanical means 54 55 Mineral processing or mineral dressing is a specialized area in the science of metallurgy that studies the mechanical means of crushing grinding and washing that enable the separation extractive metallurgy of valuable metals or minerals from their gangue waste material Processing of placer ore material consists of gravity dependent methods of separation such as sluice boxes Only minor shaking or washing may be necessary to disaggregate unclump the sands or gravels before processing Processing of ore from a lode mine whether it is a surface or subsurface mine requires that the rock ore be crushed and pulverized before extraction of the valuable minerals begins After lode ore is crushed recovery of the valuable minerals is done by one or a combination of several mechanical and chemical techniques 56 Since most metals are present in ores as oxides or sulfides the metal needs to be reduced to its metallic form This can be accomplished through chemical means such as smelting or through electrolytic reduction as in the case of aluminium Geometallurgy combines the geologic sciences with extractive metallurgy and mining 40 In 2018 led by Chemistry and Biochemistry professor Bradley D Smith University of Notre Dame researchers invented a new class of molecules whose shape and size enable them to capture and contain precious metal ions reported in a study published by the Journal of the American Chemical Society The new method converts gold containing ore into chloroauric acid and extracts it using an industrial solvent The container molecules are able to selectively separate the gold from the solvent without the use of water stripping The newly developed molecules can eliminate water stripping whereas mining traditionally relies on a 125 year old method that treats gold containing ore with large quantities of poisonous sodium cyanide this new process has a milder environmental impact and that besides gold it can be used for capturing other metals such as platinum and palladium and could also be used in urban mining processes that remove precious metals from wastewater streams 57 Environmental effects EditThis section is an excerpt from Environmental effects of mining edit Environmental effects of mining can occur at local regional and global scales through direct and indirect mining practices The effects can result in erosion sinkholes loss of biodiversity or the contamination of soil groundwater and surface water by the chemicals emitted from mining processes These processes also affect the atmosphere from the emissions of carbon which have an effect on the quality of human health and biodiversity 58 Some mining methods lithium mining phosphate mining coal mining mountaintop removal mining and sand mining may have such significant environmental and public health effects that mining companies in some countries are required to follow strict environmental and rehabilitation codes to ensure that the mined area returns to its original state Environmental regulation Edit Iron hydroxide precipitate stains a stream receiving acid drainage from surface coal mining Countries with strongly enforced mining regulations commonly require environmental impact assessment development of environmental management plans and mine closure planning prior beginning mine operations Environmental monitoring during operation and after closure may also be required Government regulations may not be well enforced especially in the developing world 40 For major mining companies and any company seeking international financing there are a number of other mechanisms to enforce environmental standards These generally relate to financing standards such as the Equator Principles IFC environmental standards and criteria for Socially responsible investing Mining companies have used this oversight from the financial sector to argue for some level of industry self regulation 59 In 1992 a Draft Code of Conduct for Transnational Corporations was proposed at the Rio Earth Summit by the UN Centre for Transnational Corporations UNCTC but the Business Council for Sustainable Development BCSD together with the International Chamber of Commerce ICC argued successfully for self regulation instead 60 This was followed by the Global Mining Initiative which was begun by nine of the largest metals and mining companies and which led to the formation of the International Council on Mining and Metals whose purpose was to act as a catalyst in an effort to improve social and environmental performance in the mining and metals industry internationally 59 The mining industry has provided funding to various conservation groups some of which have been working with conservation agendas that are at odds with an emerging acceptance of the rights of indigenous people particularly the right to make land use decisions 61 Certification of mines with good practices occurs through the International Organization for Standardization ISO For example ISO 9000 and ISO 14001 which certify an auditable environmental management system involve short inspections although they have been accused of lacking rigor clarification needed 59 183 84 Certification is also available through Ceres Global Reporting Initiative but these reports are voluntary and unverified Miscellaneous other certification programs exist for various projects typically through nonprofit groups 59 185 86 The purpose of a 2012 EPS PEAKS paper 62 was to provide evidence on policies managing ecological costs and maximize socio economic benefits of mining using host country regulatory initiatives It found existing literature suggesting donors encourage developing countries to Make the environment poverty link and introduce cutting edge wealth measures and natural capital accounts Reform old taxes in line with more recent financial innovation engage directly with the companies enact land use and impact assessments and incorporate specialized support and standards agencies Set in play transparency and community participation initiatives using the wealth accrued Waste Edit Further information Tailings Location of waste rock storage center at Teghut village Copper Molybdenum Mine in Armenia s northern Lori province Ore mills generate large amounts of waste called tailings 63 For example 99 tons of waste is generated per ton of copper with even higher ratios in gold mining because only 5 3 g of gold is extracted per ton of ore a ton of gold produces 200 000 tons of tailings 64 As time goes on and richer deposits are exhausted and technology improves this number is going down to 5 g and less These tailings can be toxic Tailings which are usually produced as a slurry are most commonly dumped into ponds made from naturally existing valleys 65 These ponds are secured by impoundments dams or embankment dams 65 In 2000 it was estimated that 3 500 tailings impoundments existed and that every year 2 to 5 major failures and 35 minor failures occurred 66 For example in the Marcopper mining disaster at least 2 million tons of tailings were released into a local river 66 In 2015 Barrick Gold Corporation spilled over 1 million liters of cyanide into a total of five rivers in Argentina near their Veladero mine 67 Since 2007 in central Finland the Talvivaara Terrafame polymetal mine s waste effluent and leaks of saline mine water have resulted in ecological collapse of a nearby lake 68 Subaqueous tailings disposal is another option 65 The mining industry has argued that submarine tailings disposal STD which disposes of tailings in the sea is ideal because it avoids the risks of tailings ponds The practice is illegal in the United States and Canada but it is used in the developing world 69 The waste is classified as either sterile or mineralized with acid generating potential and the movement and storage of this material form a major part of the mine planning process When the mineralised package is determined by an economic cut off the near grade mineralised waste is usually dumped separately with view to later treatment should market conditions change and it becomes economically viable Civil engineering design parameters are used in the design of the waste dumps and special conditions apply to high rainfall areas and to seismically active areas Waste dump designs must meet all regulatory requirements of the country in whose jurisdiction the mine is located It is also common practice to rehabilitate dumps to an internationally acceptable standard which in some cases means that higher standards than the local regulatory standard are applied 66 Industry EditMain pages List of mines List of mining companies Category Mining companies and Category Mining industry by country The Sarkijarvi pit of the apatite mine in Siilinjarvi Finland Mining exists in many countries London is the headquarters for large miners such as Anglo American BHP and Rio Tinto 70 The US mining industry is also large but it is dominated by extraction of coal and other nonmetal minerals e g rock and sand and various regulations have worked to reduce the significance of mining in the United States 70 In 2007 the total market capitalization of mining companies was reported at US 962 billion which compares to a total global market cap of publicly traded companies of about US 50 trillion in 2007 71 In 2002 Chile and Peru were reportedly the major mining countries of South America 72 The mineral industry of Africa includes the mining of various minerals it produces relatively little of the industrial metals copper lead and zinc but according to one estimate has as a percent of world reserves 40 of gold 60 of cobalt and 90 of the world s platinum group metals 73 Mining in India is a significant part of that country s economy In the developed world mining in Australia with BHP founded and headquartered in the country and mining in Canada are particularly significant For rare earth minerals mining China reportedly controlled 95 of production in 2013 74 The Bingham Canyon Mine of Rio Tinto s subsidiary Kennecott Utah Copper While exploration and mining can be conducted by individual entrepreneurs or small businesses most modern day mines are large enterprises requiring large amounts of capital to establish Consequently the mining sector of the industry is dominated by large often multinational companies most of them publicly listed It can be argued that what is referred to as the mining industry is actually two sectors one specializing in exploration for new resources and the other in mining those resources The exploration sector is typically made up of individuals and small mineral resource companies called juniors which are dependent on venture capital The mining sector is made up of large multinational companies that are sustained by production from their mining operations Various other industries such as equipment manufacture environmental testing and metallurgy analysis rely on and support the mining industry throughout the world Canadian stock exchanges have a particular focus on mining companies particularly junior exploration companies through Toronto s TSX Venture Exchange Canadian companies raise capital on these exchanges and then invest the money in exploration globally 70 Some have argued that below juniors there exists a substantial sector of illegitimate companies primarily focused on manipulating stock prices 70 Mining operations can be grouped into five major categories in terms of their respective resources These are oil and gas extraction coal mining metal ore mining nonmetallic mineral mining and quarrying and mining support activities 75 Of all of these categories oil and gas extraction remains one of the largest in terms of its global economic importance Prospecting potential mining sites a vital area of concern for the mining industry is now done using sophisticated new technologies such as seismic prospecting and remote sensing satellites Mining is heavily affected by the prices of the commodity minerals which are often volatile The 2000s commodities boom commodities supercycle increased the prices of commodities driving aggressive mining In addition the price of gold increased dramatically in the 2000s which increased gold mining for example one study found that conversion of forest in the Amazon increased six fold from the period 2003 2006 292 ha yr to the period 2006 2009 1 915 ha yr largely due to artisanal mining 76 Corporate classifications Edit Mining companies can be classified based on their size and financial capabilities Major companies are considered to have an adjusted annual mining related revenue of more than US 500 million with the financial capability to develop a major mine on its own Intermediate companies have at least 50 million in annual revenue but less than 500 million Junior companies rely on equity financing as their principal means of funding exploration Juniors are mainly pure exploration companies but may also produce minimally and do not have a revenue exceeding US 50 million 77 Re their valuation and stock market characteristics see Valuation finance Valuation of mining projects Regulation and governance Edit EITI Global Conference 2016 New regulations and a process of legislative reforms aim to improve the harmonization and stability of the mining sector in mineral rich countries 78 New legislation for mining industry in African countries still appears to be an issue but has the potential to be solved when a consensus is reached on the best approach 79 By the beginning of the 21st century the booming and increasingly complex mining sector in mineral rich countries was providing only slight benefits to local communities especially in given the sustainability issues Increasing debate and influence by NGOs and local communities called for new approaches which would also include disadvantaged communities and work towards sustainable development even after mine closure including transparency and revenue management By the early 2000s community development issues and resettlements became mainstream concerns in World Bank mining projects 79 Mining industry expansion after mineral prices increased in 2003 and also potential fiscal revenues in those countries created an omission in the other economic sectors in terms of finances and development Furthermore this highlighted regional and local demand for mining revenues and an inability of sub national governments to effectively use the revenues The Fraser Institute a Canadian think tank has highlighted clarification needed the environmental protection laws in developing countries as well as voluntary efforts by mining companies to improve their environmental impact 80 In 2007 the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative EITI was mainstreamed clarification needed in all countries cooperating with the World Bank in mining industry reform 79 The EITI operates and was implemented with the support of the EITI multi donor trust fund managed by the World Bank 81 The EITI aims to increase transparency in transactions between governments and companies in extractive industries 82 by monitoring the revenues and benefits between industries and recipient governments The entrance process is voluntary for each country and is monitored by multiple stakeholders including governments private companies and civil society representatives responsible for disclosure and dissemination of the reconciliation report 79 however the competitive disadvantage of company by company public report is for some of the businesses in Ghana at least the main constraint 83 Therefore the outcome assessment in terms of failure or success of the new EITI regulation does not only rest on the government s shoulders but also on civil society and companies 84 However implementation has issues inclusion or exclusion of artisanal mining and small scale mining ASM from the EITI and how to deal with non cash payments made by companies to subnational governments Furthermore the disproportionate revenues the mining industry can bring to the comparatively small number of people that it employs 85 causes other problems like a lack of investment in other less lucrative sectors leading to swings in government revenue because of volatility in the oil markets Artisanal mining is clearly an issue in EITI Countries such as the Central African Republic D R Congo Guinea Liberia and Sierra Leone i e almost half of the mining countries implementing the EITI 85 Among other things limited scope of the EITI involving disparity in terms of knowledge of the industry and negotiation skills thus far flexibility of the policy e g liberty of the countries to expand beyond the minimum requirements and adapt it to their needs creates another risk of unsuccessful implementation Public awareness increase where government should act as a bridge between public and initiative for a successful outcome of the policy is an important element to be considered 86 World Bank Edit World Bank logo The World Bank has been involved in mining since 1955 mainly through grants from its International Bank for Reconstruction and Development with the Bank s Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency offering political risk insurance 87 Between 1955 and 1990 it provided about 2 billion to fifty mining projects broadly categorized as reform and rehabilitation greenfield mine construction mineral processing technical assistance and engineering These projects have been criticized particularly the Ferro Carajas project of Brazil begun in 1981 88 The World Bank established mining codes intended to increase foreign investment in 1988 it solicited feedback from 45 mining companies on how to increase their involvement 59 20 In 1992 the World Bank began to push for privatization of government owned mining companies with a new set of codes beginning with its report The Strategy for African Mining In 1997 Latin America s largest miner Companhia Vale do Rio Doce CVRD was privatized These and other developments such as the Philippines 1995 Mining Act led the bank to publish a third report Assistance for Minerals Sector Development and Reform in Member Countries which endorsed mandatory environment impact assessments and attention to the concerns of the local population The codes based on this report are influential in the legislation of developing nations The new codes are intended to encourage development through tax holidays zero custom duties reduced income taxes and related measures 59 22 The results of these codes were analyzed by a group from the University of Quebec which concluded that the codes promote foreign investment but fall very short of permitting sustainable development 89 The observed negative correlation between natural resources and economic development is known as the resource curse citation needed Safety Edit Mining transport in Devnya Bulgaria A coal miner in West Virginia spraying rockdust to reduce the combustible fraction of coal dust in the air Main article Mine safetySafety has long been a concern in the mining business especially in sub surface mining The Courrieres mine disaster Europe s worst mining accident involved the death of 1 099 miners in Northern France on March 10 1906 This disaster was surpassed only by the Benxihu Colliery accident in China on April 26 1942 which killed 1 549 miners 90 While mining today is substantially safer than it was in previous decades mining accidents still occur Government figures indicate that 5 000 Chinese miners die in accidents each year while other reports have suggested a figure as high as 20 000 91 Between 1870 and 1920 in Queensland Australia an increase in mining accidents lead to more safety measures surrounding the use of explosives for mining 92 Mining accidents continue worldwide including accidents causing dozens of fatalities at a time such as the 2007 Ulyanovskaya Mine disaster in Russia the 2009 Heilongjiang mine explosion in China and the 2010 Upper Big Branch Mine disaster in the United States Mining has been identified by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health NIOSH as a priority industry sector in the National Occupational Research Agenda NORA to identify and provide intervention strategies regarding occupational health and safety issues 93 The Mining Safety and Health Administration MSHA was established in 1978 to work to prevent death illness and injury from mining and promote safe and healthful workplaces for US miners 94 Since its implementation in 1978 the number of miner fatalities has decreased from 242 miners in 1978 to 24 miners in 2019 citation needed There are numerous occupational hazards associated with mining including exposure to rockdust which can lead to diseases such as silicosis asbestosis and pneumoconiosis Gases in the mine can lead to asphyxiation and could also be ignited Mining equipment can generate considerable noise putting workers at risk for hearing loss Cave ins rock falls and exposure to excess heat are also known hazards The current NIOSH Recommended Exposure Limit REL of noise is 85 dBA with a 3 dBA exchange rate and the MSHA Permissible Exposure Limit PEL is 90 dBA with a 5 dBA exchange rate as an 8 hour time weighted average NIOSH has found that 25 of noise exposed workers in Mining Quarrying and Oil and Gas Extraction have hearing impairment 95 The prevalence of hearing loss increased by 1 from 1991 to 2001 within these workers citation needed Noise studies have been conducted in several mining environments Stageloaders 84 102 dBA shearers 85 99 dBA auxiliary fans 84 120 dBA continuous mining machines 78 109 dBA and roof bolters 92 103 dBA represent some of the noisiest equipment in underground coal mines 96 Dragline oilers dozer operators and welders using air arcing were occupations with the highest noise exposures among surface coal miners 97 Coal mines had the highest hearing loss injury likelihood 98 Human rights EditIn addition to the environmental impacts of mining processes a prominent criticism pertaining to this form of extractive practice and of mining companies are the human rights abuses occurring within mining sites and communities close to them 99 Frequently despite being protected by International Labor rights miners are not given appropriate equipment to provide them with protection from possible mine collapse or from harmful pollutants and chemicals expelled during the mining process work in inhumane conditions spending numerous hours working in extreme heat darkness and 14 hour workdays with no allocated time for breaks 100 Child labor Edit Breaker boys child workers who broke down coal at a mine in South Pittston Pennsylvania United States in the early 20th century Included within the human rights abuses that occur during mining processes are instances of child labor These instances are a cause for widespread criticism of mines harvesting cobalt a mineral essential for powering modern technologies such as laptops smartphones and electric vehicles Many of these cases of child laborers are found in the Democratic Republic of Congo Reports have risen of children carrying sacks of cobalt weighing 25 kg from small mines to local traders 101 being paid for their work only in food and accommodation A number of companies such as Apple Google Microsoft and Tesla have been implicated in lawsuits brought by families whose children were severely injured or killed during mining activities in Congo 102 In December 2019 14 Congolese families filed a lawsuit against Glencore a mining company which supplies the essential cobalt to these multinational corporations with allegations of negligence that led to the deaths of children or injuries such as broken spines emotional distress and forced labor citation needed Indigenous peoples Edit There have also been instances of killings and evictions attributed to conflicts with mining companies Almost a third of 227 murders in 2020 were of Indigenous peoples rights activists on the frontlines of climate change activism linked to logging mining large scale agribusiness hydroelectric dams and other infrastructure according to Global Witness 103 The relationship between indigenous peoples and mining is defined by struggles over access to land In Australia the Aboriginal Bininj said mining posed a threat to their living culture and could damage sacred heritage sites 104 105 In the Philippines an anti mining movement has raised concerns regarding the total disregard for Indigenous communities ancestral land rights 106 Ifugao peoples opposition to mining led a governor to proclaim a ban on mining operations in Mountain Province Philippines 106 In Brazil more than 170 tribes organized a march to oppose controversial attempts to strip back indigenous land rights and open their territories to mining operations 107 The United Nations Commission on Human Rights has called on Brazil s Supreme Court to uphold Indigenous land rights to prevent exploitation by mining groups and industrial agriculture 108 Records EditThe factual accuracy of parts of this article those related to article may be compromised due to out of date information The reason given is Deepest mine record was just changed and might need more detail Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information Last update 9th July 2022 July 2022 See also Extremes on Earth Subterranean Chuquicamata Chile site of the largest circumference and second deepest open pit copper mine in the world As of 2019 Mponeng is the world s deepest mine from ground level reaching a depth of 4 km 2 5 mi below ground level The trip from the surface to the bottom of the mine takes over an hour It is a gold mine in South Africa s Gauteng province Previously known as Western Deep Levels 1 Shaft the underground and surface works were commissioned in 1987 The mine is considered to be one of the most substantial gold mines in the world The Moab Khutsong gold mine in North West Province South Africa has the world s longest winding steel wire rope which is able to lower workers to 3 054 metres 10 020 ft in one uninterrupted four minute journey 109 The deepest mine in Europe is the 16th shaft of the uranium mines in Pribram Czech Republic at 1 838 metres 6 030 ft 110 Second is Bergwerk Saar in Saarland Germany at 1 750 metres 5 740 ft citation needed The deepest open pit mine in the world is Bingham Canyon Mine in Bingham Canyon Utah United States at over 1 200 metres 3 900 ft The largest and second deepest open pit copper mine in the world is Chuquicamata in northern Chile at 900 metres 3 000 ft which annually produces 443 000 tons of copper and 20 000 tons of molybdenum 111 112 113 The deepest open pit mine with respect to sea level is Tagebau Hambach in Germany where the base of the pit is 299 metres 981 ft below sea level 114 The largest underground mine is Kiirunavaara Mine in Kiruna Sweden With 450 kilometres 280 mi of roads 40 million tonnes of annually produced ore and a depth of 1 270 metres 4 170 ft it is also one of the most modern underground mines The deepest borehole in the world is Kola Superdeep Borehole at 12 262 metres 40 230 ft but this is connected to scientific drilling not mining 115 Metal reserves and recycling Edit Macro of native copper about 1 1 2 inches 4 cm in size The Pyhasalmi Mine a metal mine in Pyhajarvi Finland A metal recycling plant in South Carolina that has been abandoned for years Main articles Landfill mining and Recycling See also Conflict resource and List of critical mineral raw materials During the 20th century the variety of metals used in society grew rapidly Today the development of major nations such as China and India and advances in technologies are fueling an ever greater demand The result is that metal mining activities are expanding and more and more of the world s metal stocks are above ground in use rather than below ground as unused reserves An example is the in use stock of copper Between 1932 and 1999 copper in use in the US rose from 73 kilograms 161 lb to 238 kilograms 525 lb per person 116 95 of the energy used to make aluminium from bauxite ore is saved by using recycled material 117 However levels of metals recycling are generally low In 2010 the International Resource Panel hosted by the United Nations Environment Programme UNEP published reports on metal stocks that exist within society 118 and their recycling rates 116 The report s authors observed that the metal stocks in society can serve as huge mines above ground However they warned that the recycling rates of some rare metals used in applications such as mobile phones battery packs for hybrid cars and fuel cells are so low that unless future end of life recycling rates are dramatically stepped up these critical metals will become unavailable for use in modern technology citation needed As recycling rates are low and so much metal has already been extracted some landfills now contain higher concentrations of metal than mines themselves 119 This is especially true of aluminum used in cans and precious metals found in discarded electronics 120 Furthermore waste after 15 years has still not broken down so less processing would be required when compared to mining ores A study undertaken by Cranfield University has found 360 million of metals could be mined from just four landfill sites 121 There is also up to 20 MJ kg of energy in waste potentially making the re extraction more profitable 122 However although the first landfill mine opened in Tel Aviv Israel in 1953 little work has followed due to the abundance of accessible ores 123 See also EditMining engineering Engineering discipline Geological engineering a discipline of engineering concerned with the application of geological science and engineering principles to fields such as civil engineering mining environmental engineering and forestry among othersPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Outline of mining Overview of and topical guide to mining Asteroid mining Exploitation of raw materials from asteroids Automated mining Removal of human labor from the mining industry Environmental effects of mining Environmental problems from uncontrolled mining Peak minerals Point in time of largest mineral production Stone industry Part of the primary sector of the economy Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative Organization of countries Kimberley Process Certification Scheme To certify the origin of rough diamonds Conflict resource War fought over resourcesPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Dutch disease Theory in economics List of critical mineral raw materials List of mining companies Blood diamond Diamonds mined in a war zone and sold to finance conflict Resource extraction Resources that exist without actions of humankindPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Resource curse Theory that resource wealth slows growthReferences Edit Definition of ORE www merriam webster com Retrieved 2023 02 10 Agricola Georg Hoover Herbert 1950 De re metallica MBLWHOI Library New York Dover Publications Hartman Howard L SME Mining Engineering Handbook Society for Mining Metallurgy and Exploration Inc 1992 p 3 J Theo Kloprogge Concepcion P Ponce Tom Loomis 18 November 2020 The Periodic Table Nature s Building Blocks An Introduction to the Naturally Occurring Elements Their Origins and Their Uses Elsevier p 54 ISBN 978 0 12 821538 8 Swaziland Natural Trust Commission Cultural Resources Malolotja Archaeology Lion Cavern Retrieved August 27 2007 Swaziland National Trust Commission Cultural Resources Malolotja Archaeology Lion Cavern Archived from the original on 2016 03 03 Retrieved 2016 02 05 Peace Parks Foundation Major Features Cultural Importance Republic of South Africa Author Retrieved August 27 2007 1 Archived 2008 12 07 at the Wayback Machine ASA October 1996 Mining and Religion in Ancient Man www2 asa3 org Retrieved 2015 06 11 Shaw I 2000 The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt New York Oxford University Press pp 57 59 a b Shaw I 2000 The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt New York Oxford University Press p 108 Shaw Ian March 1994 Pharaonic quarrying and mining settlement and procurement in Egypt s marginal regions Antiquity 68 258 108 119 doi 10 1017 S0003598X0004624X ISSN 0003 598X S2CID 127791320 AbdelMaksoud K M Al Fawakhir Gold mine as a Geosite Eastern Desert Egypt Int J Earth Sci Geol Rundsch 109 197 199 2020 https doi org proxy library carleton ca 10 1007 s00531 019 01811 w Neesse Thomas April 2014 Selective attachment processes in ancient gold ore beneficiation Minerals Engineering 58 52 63 Bibcode 2014MiEng 58 52N doi 10 1016 j mineng 2014 01 009 Mining greece ancient mines www miningreece com 2014 12 10 Retrieved 2015 06 11 Mining Greece Ancient Quarries in Thassos www miningreece com 2014 12 10 Retrieved 2015 06 11 Mining Greece the Goldmines of Alexander the Great www miningreece com 2014 12 10 Retrieved 2015 06 11 Calvo Miguel 2003 Minerales y Minas de Espana Vol II Sulfuros y sulfosales Vitoria Spain Museo de Ciencias Naturales de Alava pp 205 335 ISBN 84 7821 543 3 The Independent 20 Jan 2007 The end of a Celtic tradition the last gold miner in Wales News independent co uk 2007 01 20 Archived from the original on July 6 2008 Retrieved 2013 06 22 Web Hosting Reseller Hosting amp Domain Names from Heart Internet romans in britain org uk Archived from the original on July 20 2010 A culture of Improvement Robert Friedel MIT Press 2007 p 81 Chapter 7 Medieval Silver and Gold Mygeologypage ucdavis edu Archived from the original on 2013 07 14 Retrieved 2013 06 22 Heaton Herbert 1948 Economic History of Europe A Harper International Edition Fifth printing February 1968 p 316 Heiss Andreas G Oeggl Klaus 2008 Analysis of the fuel wood used in Late Bronze Age and Early Iron Age copper mining sites of the Schwaz and Brixlegg area Tyrol Austria Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 17 2 211 21 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 156 1683 doi 10 1007 s00334 007 0096 8 S2CID 15636432 The use of Firesetting in the Granite Quarries of South India Paul T Craddock The Bulletin of the Peak District Mines Historical Society Vol 13 Number 1 1996 The Spanish Tradition in Gold and Silver Mining Otis E Young Arizona and the West Vol 7 No 4 Winter 1965 pp 299 314 Journal of the Southwest JSTOR 40167137 The Trans Saharan Gold Trade 7th 14th Century The Metropolitan Museum October 2000 Retrieved 7 July 2022 Published by M Garside 2021 10 20 Mining industry in Africa statistics amp facts Statista Retrieved 2022 03 19 Fiji through the Prism of Geology and Mines Inspection Chapter 5 in White F 2020 Miner with a Heart of Gold biography of a mineral science and engineering educator Friesen Press Victoria ISBN 978 1 5255 7765 9 Hardcover 978 1 5255 7766 6 Paperback 978 1 5255 7767 3 eBook a b Lankton L 1991 Cradle to Grave Life Work and Death at the Lake Superior Copper Mines New York Oxford University Press pp 5 6 a b c West G A 1970 Copper its mining and use by the aborigines of the Lake Superior Region Westport Conn Greenwood Press a b Ricard T A 1932 A History of American Mining McGraw Hill Book Company Vaden H E amp Prevost G 2002 Politics of Latin America The Power Game New York Oxford University Press p 34 Maynard S R Lisenbee A L amp Rogers J 2002 Preliminary Geologic Map of the Picture Rock 7 5 Minute Quadrangle Santa Fe County Central New Mexico New Mexico Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources Open File Report DM 49 The Cerrillos Hills Park Coalition 2000 Cerrillos Hills Historic Park Vision Statement Public documents Author Retrieved August 27 2007 2 Archived August 1 2012 at the Wayback Machine The WPA Guide to Wisconsin The Badger State Federal Writers Project Trinity University Press Wisconsin USA 2013 p 451 Retrieved November 15 2018 McClure R Schneider A The General Mining Act of 1872 has left a legacy of riches and ruin Seattle PI Boorstin D J 1965 The Americans The National Experience New York Vintage Books pp 78 81 Mining in the West Development Articles and Essays Meeting of Frontiers Digital Collections Library of Congress Library of Congress Washington D C 20540 USA Retrieved 27 September 2022 a b Miller C 2013 Atlas of US and Canadian Environmental History p 64 Taylor amp Francis History of Australia s Minerals Industry Australian Atlas of Minerals Processing Mines and amp Processing Centres a b c 12 9 Mining Geosciences LibreTexts 2017 01 28 Retrieved 2023 04 03 McGill University Sunset of a Transformational Career Chapter 16 in White F Miner with a Heart of Gold biography of a mineral science and engineering educator Friesen Press Victoria 2020 ISBN 978 1 5255 7765 9 Hardcover 978 1 5255 7766 6 Paperback 978 1 5255 7767 3 eBook Hartmann HL Introductory Mining Engineering p 11 First chapter In Situ Leach Mining ISL of Uranium World nuclear org Archived from the original on 2010 08 17 Retrieved 2013 06 22 a b Bajpayee T S Rehak T R Mowrey G L Ingram D K January 2004 Blasting injuries in surface mining with emphasis on flyrock and blast area security Journal of Safety Research 35 1 47 57 doi 10 1016 j jsr 2003 07 003 ISSN 0022 4375 PMID 14992846 Wegner Jan Helen 2010 06 22 BLASTING OUT EXPLOSIVES PRACTICES IN QUEENSLAND METALLIFEROUS MINES 1870 1920 Blasting out Australian Economic History Review 50 2 193 208 doi 10 1111 j 1467 8446 2010 00301 x Artisanal and Small Scale Mining Intergovernmental Forum Retrieved 2023 03 30 Addressing Forced Labor in Artisanal and Small scale Mining ASM PDF responsiblemines org 2014 Retrieved 25 October 2018 Global Trends in Artisanal and Small Scale Mining ASM A review of key numbers and issues IISD 2018 01 20 Retrieved 2018 10 26 Women and Artisanal Mining Gender Roles and the Road Ahead PDF siteresources worldbank org Retrieved 26 October 2018 Landfill Mining Landfill Mining Preserving Resources through Integrated Sustainable Management of Waste Technical Brief from the World Resource Foundation Krook Joakim Svensson Niclas Eklund Mats 2012 03 01 Landfill mining A critical review of two decades of research Waste Management 32 3 513 20 Bibcode 2012WaMan 32 513K doi 10 1016 j wasman 2011 10 015 ISSN 0956 053X PMID 22083108 Drum The Oil November 26 2010 Coal Mining and the Highwall Method A Media Solutions Harraz Hassan Z 2010 Underground mining Methods doi 10 13140 RG 2 1 2881 1124 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Metallurgy Extractive metallurgy Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2021 06 04 Mining Concentrate Thickener Red Meters Archived from the original on 2021 06 25 Retrieved 2021 03 29 Minerals Mining Conveyors Mineral Mining Conveyor Products ASGCO Retrieved 2023 04 03 Leotaud V R Scientists develop technique to reduce cost environmental impact of mining precious metal by Valentina Ruiz LeotaudMining com June 10 2018 Laura J Sonter December 5 2018 Mining and biodiversity key issues and research needs in conservation science Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 285 1892 20181926 doi 10 1098 rspb 2018 1926 PMC 6283941 PMID 30518573 a b c d e f Moody R 2007 Rocks and Hard Places Zed Books Abrahams D 2005 Regulations for Corporations A historical account of TNC regulation Archived 2011 10 01 at the Wayback Machine p 6 UNRISD Chapin Mac 2004 10 15 A Challenge to Conservationists Can we protect natural habitats without abusing the people who live in them World Watch Magazine 6 17 Archived from the original on 2010 08 02 Retrieved 2010 02 18 Bloom M J amp Denison M 2012 Environmental management for extractives PROFESSIONAL EVIDENCE AND APPLIED KNOWLEDGE SERVICES http partnerplatform org zl177g4a Zvereva V P Frolov K R Lysenko A I 2021 10 13 Chemical reactions and conditions of mineral formation at tailings storage facilities of the Russian Far East Gornye Nauki I Tekhnologii Mining Science and Technology Russia 6 3 181 191 doi 10 17073 2500 0632 2021 3 181 191 ISSN 2500 0632 S2CID 243263530 What is the Cost of Mining Gold Visual Capitalist 2013 05 21 Retrieved 2015 06 11 a b c US EPA 1994 Technical Report Design and Evaluation of Tailings Dams dead link a b c TE Martin MP Davies 2000 Trends in the stewardship of tailings dams Exclusive Barrick faces sanctions for Argentina cyanide spills Reuters 2017 05 08 Leppanen Jaakko Johannes Weckstrom Jan Korhola Atte 2017 09 05 Multiple mining impacts induce widespread changes in ecosystem dynamics in a boreal lake Scientific Reports 7 1 10581 Bibcode 2017NatSR 710581L doi 10 1038 s41598 017 11421 8 ISSN 2045 2322 PMC 5585241 PMID 28874843 Coumans C 2002 Mining s Problem with Waste Archived 2017 07 06 at the Wayback Machine MiningWatch Canada a b c d MacDonald A 2002 Industry in Transition A Profile of the North American Mining Sector Archived 2011 07 28 at the Wayback Machine Free full text Archived 2013 09 15 at the Wayback Machine Reuters Global stock values top 50 trln industry data Environmental Effects of Foreign Investment Versus Domestic Investment in the Mining Sector In Latin America OECD Mining in Africa Overview Mbendi China s Continuing Monopoly Over Rare Earth Minerals U S News amp World Report ESMD US Census Bureau Classification Development Branch US Census Bureau Site North American Industry Classification System main page www census gov Retrieved 2018 07 19 Swenson JJ Carter CE Domec J C Delgado CI 2011 Gold Mining in the Peruvian Amazon Global Prices Deforestation and Mercury Imports PLoS ONE 6 4 e18875 doi 10 1371 journal pone 0018875 Lay summary Amazon Gold Fever Comes with a High Environmental Cost Archived 2013 03 09 at the Wayback Machine Metals Economics Group World Exploration Trends Report Metals Economics Group Inc Archived from the original PDF on 2012 08 03 Retrieved 2009 05 05 Cambell Bonnie 2008 Regulation amp Legitimacy in the Mining Industry in Africa Where does PDF Review of African Political Economy 35 3 367 89 doi 10 1080 03056240802410984 S2CID 154670334 Retrieved 7 April 2011 a b c d The World Bank s Evolutionary Approach to Mining Sector Reform PDF The World Bank Archived from the original PDF on 2014 04 17 Retrieved 4 April 2011 Do Canadian mining companies operating abroad face weaker environmental regulations Archived 2018 07 06 at the Wayback Machine MiningFacts org Fraser Institute Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative Governance Structure Retrieved 4 April 2011 Business and Human Right Resource Centre 2009 Principles Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative EITI Archived from the original on 8 April 2011 Retrieved 6 April 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a last has generic name help The Ghanaian Journal At the Fifth EITI Global Conference Retrieved 3 April 2011 Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative Report of 5th EITI Global Conference in Paris 2011 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 26 July 2011 Retrieved 4 April 2011 a b World Bank s Oil Gas and Mining Policy and Operations Unit COCPO Advancing the EITI in the Mining Sector Implementation Issues PDF Retrieved 6 April 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a last has generic name help Revenue Watch Institute 2010 Promoting Transparency in the Extractive Sectors An EITI Training for Tanzania Legislators Archived from the original on July 20 2011 Retrieved 6 April 2011 For an overview of the Bank and mining see Mining Sustainability and Risk World Bank Group Experiences Archived 2011 09 29 at the Wayback Machine See the 1995 World Development 23 3 pp 385 400 GRAMA 2003 The Challenges of Development Mining Codes in Africa And Corporate Responsibility In International and Comparative Mineral Law and Policy Trends and Prospects Summarized in the African Mining Codes Questioned Archived January 1 2016 at the Wayback Machine Marcel Barrois Le Monde in French March 10 2006 permanent dead link Where The Coal Is Stained With Blood Time March 2 2007 Wegner Jan Helen 2010 06 22 BLASTING OUT EXPLOSIVES PRACTICES IN QUEENSLAND METALLIFEROUS MINES 1870 1920 Blasting out Australian Economic History Review 50 2 193 208 doi 10 1111 j 1467 8446 2010 00301 x NORA Mining Sector Council NIOSH CDC www cdc gov 2017 10 24 Retrieved 2018 02 22 Mission Mine Safety and Health Administration MSHA www msha gov Retrieved 2018 07 19 Masterson Elizabeth A Deddens James A Themann Christa L Bertke Stephen Calvert Geoffrey M April 2015 Trends in worker hearing loss by industry sector 1981 2010 American Journal of Industrial Medicine 58 4 392 401 doi 10 1002 ajim 22429 ISSN 1097 0274 PMC 4557728 PMID 25690583 Summary of Longwall and Continuous Miner Section Noise Studies in Underground Coal Mines www cdc gov 25 October 2016 Retrieved 2018 07 19 Worker exposure and equipment noise in large surface coal mines www cdc gov Retrieved 2018 07 19 Sun Kan Azman Amanda S March 2018 Evaluating hearing loss risks in the mining industry through MSHA citations Journal of Occupational and Environmental Hygiene 15 3 246 62 doi 10 1080 15459624 2017 1412584 ISSN 1545 9632 PMC 5848488 PMID 29200378 Spohr Maximilian January 2016 Human Rights Risks in Mining A Baseline Study PDF BGR p 10 Archived from the original PDF on 31 October 2020 Retrieved 28 December 2020 Tamufor Lindlyn Human Rights Violations in Africa s Mining Sector PDF Ghana Third World Network Africa p 9 Archived from the original PDF on 18 August 2021 Retrieved 28 December 2020 Financial Times 7 July 2019 Congo Child Labor and Your Electric Car Financial Times Archived from the original on 2022 12 10 Kelly Annie 16 December 2019 Apple and Google named in US lawsuit over Congolese child cobalt mining deaths The Guardian Retrieved 18 January 2021 Marshall Claire 2021 09 13 Record number of environmental activists murdered BBC via Yahoo News Retrieved 2021 09 13 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Behrendt Larissa Strelein Lisa March 2001 Old Habits Die Hard Indigenous Land Rights and Mining in Australia Cultural Survival Retrieved 2021 09 13 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Uranium Mining The Gundjeihmi Aboriginal Corporation Mirarr Retrieved 2021 09 13 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b Tartlet R K March 2001 The Cordillera People s Alliance Mining and Indigenous Rights in the Luzon Highlands Cultural Surival Retrieved 2021 09 13 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Phillips Tom Milhorance Flavia 2021 09 10 Indigenous warrior women take fight to save ancestral lands to Brazilian capital The Guardian Retrieved 2021 09 13 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Brazil Supreme Court must uphold indigenous land rights UN expert UN OHCHR 2021 08 23 Retrieved 2021 09 13 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Mining and minerals in South Africa SouthAfrica info 8 August 2012 Retrieved 13 August 2012 Mineral deposits from their origin to their environmental impacts Taylor amp Francis January 1995 ISBN 9789054105503 Chuquicamata MINING com 2012 07 17 Retrieved 2015 06 11 Chuquicamata s Life Underground Will Cost a Fortune but is Likely to Pay Off for Codelco Copper Investing News 2015 04 06 Archived from the original on April 6 2015 Retrieved 2015 06 11 The TEX Report Ltd www texreport co jp Archived from the original on 2016 03 03 Retrieved 2015 06 11 Nordrhein Westfalen in Zahlen und Geodaten PDF Piesing Mark The deepest hole we have ever dug www bbc com Retrieved 2021 05 04 a b The Recycling Rates of Metals A Status Report 2010 International Resource Panel United Nations Environment Programme Tread lightly Aluminium attack Carolyn Fry Guardian co uk 22 February 2008 Metal Stocks in Society Scientific Synthesis 2010 International Resource Panel United Nations Environment Programme Landfill mining new opportunities ahead PDF MacFarlanes Archived from the original PDF on 2015 06 13 Retrieved 2015 06 11 Landfill Mining www enviroalternatives com Retrieved 2015 06 11 Study shows around 360 million of metals could be mined from just four landfill sites www rebnews com Archived from the original on 2015 06 12 Retrieved 2015 06 11 Enhanced Landfill Mining Material recovery energy utilisation and economics in the EU Directive perspective PDF Enhanced Landfill Mining Archived from the original PDF on 2015 06 12 Retrieved 2015 06 11 Assessing the opportunities of landfill mining www rug nl Research database University of Groningen Retrieved 2015 06 11 Further reading EditWoytinsky W S and E S Woytinsky 1953 World Population and Production Trends and Outlooks pp 749 881 with many tables and maps on the worldwide mining industry in 1950 including coal metals and minerals Ali Saleem H 2003 Mining the Environment and Indigenous Development Conflicts Tucson AZ University of Arizona Press ISBN missing Ali Saleem H 2009 Treasures of the Earth need greed and a sustainable future New Haven and London Yale University Press ISBN missing Even Zohar Chaim 2002 From Mine to Mistress Corporate Strategies and Government Policies in the International Diamond Industry Mining Journal Books p 555 ISBN 978 0 9537336 1 3 Geobacter Project Gold mines may owe their origins to bacteria in PDF format Garrett Dennis Alaska Placer Mining ISBN missing Jayanta Bhattacharya 2007 Principles of Mine Planning 2nd ed Wide Publishing p 505 ISBN 978 81 7764 480 7 Morrison Tom 1992 Hardrock Gold a miner s tale ISBN 0 8061 2442 3 John Milne The Miner s Handbook A Handy Reference on the subjects of Mineral Deposits 1894 Mining operations in the 19th century The Miner s Handbook A Handy Book of Reference on the Subjects of Mineral Deposits Mining Operations Ore Dressing Etc For the Use of Students and Others Interested in Mining Matters Aryee B Ntibery B Atorkui E 2003 Trends in the small scale mining of precious minerals in Ghana a perspective on its environmental impact Journal of Cleaner Production 11 131 40 Temple John 1972 Mining An International History Ernest Benn Limited The Oil gas and Mining Sustainable Community Development Fund 2009 Social Mine Closure Strategy Mali in CommDev Projects Social Mine Closure Strategy Mali White F 2020 Miner with a Heart of Gold biography of a mineral science and engineering educator Friesen Press Victoria ISBN 978 1 5255 7765 9 Hardcover 978 1 5255 7766 6 Paperback 978 1 5255 7767 3 eBook External links Edit Look up mining in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mining Wikiquote has quotations related to Mining Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Mining tourism First chapter of Introductory Mining Engineering An introduction to geology and hard rock mining archive Mining New International Encyclopedia 1905 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mining amp oldid 1151439451, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.