Thermal Desorption Characteristics of Mercury Contaminated Tailings from Gold-Silver Mine

2021 ◽  
Vol 38 (5) ◽  
pp. 434-441
Author(s):  
Soo-Jin Cho ◽  
Yong-Chil Seo ◽  
Eun-Song Lee ◽  
Ju-In Ko
2002 ◽  
Vol 712 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryu Murakami ◽  
Jun Takada ◽  
Toshiyuki Torigoe ◽  
Iwao Matsumoto ◽  
Yoshio Toya ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTIn the early modern age Japan was a kingdom rich in metal resources. A lot of gold, silver and copper were produced and exported to foreign countries, nevertheless Japan maintained a national isolation policy. The Iwami silver mine located in Shimane prefecture was the representative silver mine that prospered most. It produced about 10 % of the world's silver output. It is now mostly abandoned and reduced to ruins. Only a famous picture scroll remains to indicate its real activities. Through archaeological excavation started in 1983, it is becoming clear that extensive remains of mining and smelting are preserved. From 1996 scientific investigation of the excavated remains has been conducted. During excavation, and confirmed by scientific research, we recognized that the artifacts deposited during both the mining of the silver ore and the smelting process could be classified into two artifactual types; objects and fragments produced in the dressing process that were not influenced by a heating process and objects influenced by a heating process and produced by smelting and refining. The low grade ore, waste and tailings (remains after gravity concentration) that were scrapped in the dressing process are included in the former type, and the furnace fragments for smelting and refining, tuyeres (blast pipes) and slag and other smelter remains are of the latter type. The waste and tailings scrapped in the dressing process have not previously been studied. This study aimed at systematically investigating the dressing technology and estimating the ore grade through the evaluation of the range of variation in the waste and tailings left as scrap in the dressing process. The analytical results revealed the actual activities practiced at the Iwami silver mine in the dressing process.


1991 ◽  
Vol 28 (5) ◽  
pp. 686-705 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andreas G. Mueller ◽  
David I. Groves ◽  
Claude P. Delor

The Savage Lode gold skarn orebody in the Marvel Loch mine, Southern Cross greenstone belt, Western Australia, replaces foliated metakomatiites in a subvertical ductile shear zone, and is located within the broad metamorphic aureole of the Ghooli Dome granodiorite–granite batholith. Pressure estimates based on metamorphic as well as alteration mineral parageneses indicate that skarn formation took place at P = 4 ± 1 kbar (1 kbar = 100 MPa), corresponding to a burial depth of about 13 km. Metamorphism reached temperatures of 550–630 °C in the mine area, and preceded skarn formation.Pressure–temperature calculations constrain the maximum temperature of the hydrothermal fluid in the Savage Lode to 640 ± 20 °C during the formation of early olivine–calcite and diopside–amphibole rocks, and to 500–600 °C during the formation of phlogopite–chlorite–calcite schists and quartz–diopside veins. Lower fluid temperatures (500 to ~ 400 °C) are recorded by retrograde serpentine (after olivine), talc (after tremolite), and petrographically late aggregates of muscovite + clinozoisite + prehnite. The oxygen fugacity of the fluid is estimated at 10−20–10−24 bar (1 bar = 100 kPa), based on the assemblage magnetite + ilmenite + olivine in calcite-rich prograde skarn. The sulphur fugacity of the fluid is estimated at 10−7–10−9 bar, based on the assemblages pyrrhotite + loellingite, pyrrhotite + arsenopyrite and pyrite + marcasite, which were deposited in a retrograde régime, when fluid temperatures fell from 550 to < 400 °C.The isotopic composition of the fluid (206Pb/204Pb = 13.77, 87Sr/86Sr = 0.7024, δ13C = −4.8‰), as inferred from hydrothermal galena, scheelite, and calcite, indicates equilibration at high temperatures with rocks of granodioritic or granitic composition. Late syn- to post-mineralization pegmatite dykes, exposed in the present mine workings, provide evidence for magmatic activity at depth. The Marvel Loch deposit represents the first well-described example of an Archean gold skarn system.


2016 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 2168-2171
Author(s):  
Dr. Alper DEMÄ°RBUGAN

Monetary valuation of changes in environmental quality has a great importance in evaluation of investment projects.The benefit or avoided damage cost from a project to change environmental quality is captured by individuals' wilingness to pay(WTP). Valuation methods based on WTP can mainly be categoriesed in two groups as 'production approach' and 'utility approach'. In this study, concept of wilingness to pay and valuation methods based on 'production approach' are investigated with an application to a mine project in Turkey.


1991 ◽  
Vol 28 (5) ◽  
pp. 659-685 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andreas G. Mueller

The Marvel Loch mine in the Archean Yilgarn Block. Western Australia, has produced 9.70 t gold and 1.92 t silver from 3.28 × 106 t of oxide–sulphide ore. The deposit is located in the Southern Cross greenstone belt, and occurs within the medium-grade metamorphic aureole of the Ghooli Dome granitoid batholith, about 1.5 km from the granitoid–greenstone contact, The deposit is controlled by a broad ductile shear zone and spatially associated with late syn- to post-mineralization pegmatite dykes. The major orebodies, represented by the Savage Lode, are hosted by a uniform sequence of metakomatiites, and form zoned replacement bodies oriented subparallel to the steeply dipping foliation of the shear zone. Lens-shaped domains of pillowed metakomatiiles (hornblende + cummingtonite + chlorite) are locally preserved between the orebodies.The gangue of the Savage Lode is laterally zoned, and shows distinct similarities to Phanerozoic magnesian skarns. Calcite–olivine rock and calcite–phlogopite–chlorite schist occur in the centre, and are enveloped by three types of calcite-poor ore, namely banded diopside–amphibole rock, quartz–diopside veins, and tremolite–phlogopite schist. The latter grades laterally into subeconomic, outer tremolite–chlorite schists. Local retrogression of prograde alteration minerals is evident in the partial replacement of olivine by iddingsite and serpentine, and in the occurrence of late muscovite, clinozoisite, and prehnite. The gangue in the lode reflects strong carbon dioxide, calcium, and potassium metasomatism.Hydrothermal oxides and sulphides (2–5 vol.%) occur disseminated throughout the Savage Lode. The oxide assemblage includes hercynite–spinel, magnetite, ilmenite, and scheelite, whereas the sulphide assemblage is dominated by pyrrhotite, loellingite, and arsenopyrite. Native gold occurs as discrete grains (0.001–3 mm) intergrown with sulphides or enclosed in gangue minerals. The average magnesian ore skarn is characterized by a MgO–FeO ratio of 2.0:1, a Au–Ag ratio of 1.7:1, and low base metal (< 500 ppm), anomalous tungsten (20–40 ppm), and high arsenic (2900 ppm) contents. The Savage and other lodes in the Marvel Loch mine may be classified as gold or gold–silver skarns by economic metal content. The magnesian rather than calcic nature of the Marvel Loch skarns is related to the high magnesium content (21 wt.% MgO) of the precursor metakomatiite rocks.


2017 ◽  
Vol 142 ◽  
pp. 45-55 ◽  
Author(s):  
Graciano P. Yumul ◽  
Walter W. Brown ◽  
Carla B. Dimalanta ◽  
Carlito A. Ausa ◽  
Decibel V. Faustino-Eslava ◽  
...  

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