Land Reclamation After Open-Pit Mineral Extraction in Britain

Author(s):  
S.C. McRae
2021 ◽  
Vol 280 ◽  
pp. 11002
Author(s):  
Yevheniy Babets ◽  
Yevheniy Terekhov ◽  
Taras Mormul ◽  
Iryna Melnikova ◽  
Vitalina Komirna

Conditions of the planning of open-pit mining objects have been identified, making it possible to reduce the need in the allotted land area during mineral extraction. The research results have allowed proposing a methodological approach to determine economic expediency of the increase in the technogenic land reclamation level under conditions of open-pit mining, being the reserves to expand the technogenic land areas returned to the economic use.


Author(s):  
T. V. Galanina ◽  
M. I. Baumgarten ◽  
T. G. Koroleva

Large-scale mining disturbs wide areas of land. The development program for the mining industry, with an expected considerable increase in production output, aggravates the problem with even vaster territories exposed to the adverse anthropogenic impact. Recovery of mining-induced ecosystems in the mineral-extracting regions becomes the top priority objective. There are many restoration mechanisms, and they should be used in integration and be highly technologically intensive as the environmental impact is many-sided. This involves pollution of water, generation of much waste and soil disturbance which is the most typical of open pit mining. Scale disturbance of land, withdrawal of farming land, land pollution and littering are critical problems to the solved in the first place. One of the way outs is highquality reclamation. This article reviews the effective rules and regulations on reclamation. The mechanism is proposed for the legal control of disturbed land reclamation on a regional and federal level. Highly technologically intensive recovery of mining-induced landscape will be backed up by the natural environment restoration strategy proposed in the Disturbed Land Reclamation Concept.


2020 ◽  
pp. 65-69
Author(s):  
I. V. Zenkov ◽  
◽  
A. S. Morin ◽  
V. N. Vokin ◽  
E. V. Kiryushina ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Vol 1006-1007 ◽  
pp. 78-82
Author(s):  
Yun Chao Liu

The coal mining has brought a series of ecological and environmental problems, including the most obvious one —land damage. Coal mine land reclamation can restore and rebuild the mine ecology, improve regional environmental quality, the establishment of social - economic - naturally coordinated development of a mine, ecologically virtuous circle of green industrial ecosystem. Open-pit coal mine of Baofa Coal Co., LTD. For its current land use, based on the "land reclamation technical standards" and other relevant standards and comprehensive study of area natural and socio-economic conditions, land suitability factors, the land reclamation countermeasures of open-pit coal mine are given out.


1978 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 223-228 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael S. Johnson

Whilst major new industrial development sometimes poses a threat to scenic values and ecologically important habitats, it is also evident that industry has contributed significantly to the present-day biological resources of the British Isles. In particular, several former mineral-extraction sites have been maintained and developed specifically for the security and management of wildlife, and now constitute important habitats for the protection and survival of less-common members of the British flora. Several locations have even been successfully defended on biological grounds against proposals to reutilize them for disposing of industrial wastes and domestic refuse.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (10) ◽  
pp. 1612 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wu Xiao ◽  
Xinyu Deng ◽  
Tingting He ◽  
Wenqi Chen

The development and utilization of mining resources are basic requirements for social and economic development. Both open-pit mining and underground mining have impacts on land, ecology, and the environment. Of these, open-pit mining is considered to have the greatest impact due to the drastic changes wrought on the original landform and the disturbance to vegetation. As awareness of environmental protection has grown, land reclamation has been included in the mining process. In this study, we used the Shengli Coalfield in the eastern steppe region of Inner Mongolia to demonstrate a mining and reclamation monitoring process. We combined the Google Earth Engine platform with time series Landsat images and the LandTrendr algorithm to identify and monitor mining disturbances to grassland and land reclamation in open-pit mining areas of the coalfield between 2003 and 2019. Pixel-based trajectories were used to reconstruct the temporal evolution of vegetation, and sequential Landsat archive data were used to achieve accurate measures of disturbances to vegetation. The results show that: (1) the proposed method can be used to determine the years in which vegetation disturbance and recovery occurred with accuracies of 86.53% and 78.57%, respectively; (2) mining in the Shengli mining area resulted in the conversion of 89.98 km2 of land from grassland, water, etc., to barren earth, and only 23.54 km2 was reclaimed, for a reclamation rate of 26.16%; and (3) the method proposed in this paper can achieve fast, efficient identification of surface mining land disturbances and reclamation, and has the potential to be applied to other similar areas.


Author(s):  
Hisni Rahmi ◽  
Didik Susetyo ◽  
Restu Juniah

Event open-pit mining methods in the exploitation of limestone by PT Semen Baturaja (Persero) Tbk cause depletion of water, air, and soil. At the end of mining activities will leave ex-mine land in the form of void and non void (empty land). Reclamation and Postmining must be carried out by the company according to the mandate of Government Regulation No. 78 year 2010. Reclamation and post-harvest activities on ex-non void mines can be revegetation activities, while void can be used as reservoirs for raw water sources. The aim is to maintain the sustainability of natural resources and water in the limestone mining environment. The research aims to determine the condition of void water produced from limestone mining activities for a sustainable environment. The method used in this study is using the pollution index method. The results showed that the water in the sump inlet and quarry outlet experienced mild pollution. Pollution index at the location of the limestone mine sump inlet worth 2.14 and for oulet quarry worth 2.07. This shows that mine void water is not feasible to be used as raw water, so water treatment needs to be done so that it meets the established quality standards. If void water comply the prescribed quality standards, environmental sustainability in the limestone mining sector can be achieved during during the life of the mine, post mining, until after the post-mining period.


2021 ◽  
Vol 942 (1) ◽  
pp. 012027
Author(s):  
P Kozińska ◽  
J Górniak-Zimroz

Abstract Illegal open pit mining might be a very dangerous activity both for the environment and also for the people living in its neighbourhood. This kind of activity is connected with environmental degradation, disruption of sustainable development and lack of the most critical last stage of the mine’s “life”, i.e. land reclamation. An additional element connected with illegal exploitation is the fact of breaking the law and stealing mineral resources. Monitoring of illegal exploitation is therefore an important aspect. The presented here review was intended to investigate which methods can be used directly to detect open pit mining sites and to evaluate their effectiveness. In the reviewed works a wide variety of methods have been used, ranging from manual methods, such as photo-interpretation, to a combination of automatic methods and photo-interpretation, to fully automatic methods. Based on the analysis, it was indicated that different types of classification (supervised, unsupervised, hybrid) are the most commonly u sed. Besides, radar interferometry, image fusion techniques, or images spectral similarity are also used.


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