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Encyclopedia > Iron mining
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The El Chino Mine located near Silver City, New Mexico is an open-pit copper mine

Mining is the extraction of valuable minerals or other geological materials from the earth, usually (but not always) from an ore body, vein, or (coal) seam. Materials commonly recovered by mining include bauxite, coal, copper, diamonds, iron, gold, lead, manganese, magnesium, nickel, phosphate, platinum, salt, silver, tin, titanium, uranium, and zinc. Other highly useful materials that are mined include clay, sand, cinder, gravel, granite, and limestone. Any material that cannot be grown from agricultural processes must be mined. Mining in a wider sense can also include extraction of oil and gas.

Contents

History

The oldest known mine in the archaeological record is the "Lion Cave" in Swaziland. At this site, which has a radiocarbon age of 43,000 years, paleolithic humans mined for the iron-containing mineral hematite, which they presumably ground to produce the red pigment ochre.


Sites of a similar age where Neandertals may have mined flint for weapons and tools have been found in Hungary.


Another early mining operation was the turquoise mine operated by the ancient Egyptians at Wady Maghareh on the Sinai Peninsula. Turquoise was also mined in pre-Columbian America in the Cerillos Mining District in New Mexico, where a mass of rock 200 feet (60 m) in depth and 300 feet (90 m) in width was removed with stone tools; the mine dump covers 20 acres (81,000 mē).


Mining techniques

Mining techniques can be divided into two basic excavation types:
1. open-cast or open-pit mining

2. tunneling by shafts into the earth.

Bioleaching is the application of bacteria to extract metals from an ore.


Environmental effects

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Several million dollars annually are spent on the environmental effects of these tailing ponds at Climax, Colorado, even though the molybdenum mine has been closed for decades.

Mining can have devastating impacts on the environment due to the massive rearrangement of minerals within the earth. The result can be unnatural high concentrations of some chemical elements over a significantly wider area of surface. Combined with the effects of water and the new 'channels' created for water to travel through, collect in, and contact with these chemicals, a situation is created where mass-scale contamination can occur.


Some examples of environmental problems associated with mining operations are:

Tar Creek, an abandoned mining area in Picher, Oklahoma that is now an Environmental Protection Agency superfund site. Water in the mine has leaked through into local groundwater, contaminating it with metals such as lead and cadmium. [1] (http://www.health.state.ok.us/PROGRAM/envhlth/sites/ottawa.html)
Scouriotissa, a copper mine in Cyprus that has been abandoned. Contaminated dust blows off this site.
Berkeley Lake, an abandoned pit mine in Butte, Montana that has filled with water which is now acidic and poisonous.

Although such issues have been associated with some mining operations in the past, modern mining practices have improved significantly and are subject to close environmental scrutiny.


See also

References and external links

  • References
    • Tom Morrison. 1992. Hardrock Gold: A Miner's Tale (ISBN 0806124423)
    • Geobacter Project: Gold mines may owe their origins to bacteria (http://www.geobacter.org/press/2001-07-21-economist.pdf) (in PDF format)
  • External links
    • Mining Glossary (http://www.anglogold.com.au/Press/Glossary.htm), anglogold.com.au
    • Mining Glossary (http://www.pamp.com/gold_c/Info_site/in_glos/in_glos_menu_all.html), pamp.com
    • mining-prospecting dictionary (http://www.e-goldprospecting.com/html/mining-prospecting_dictionary.html), e-goldprospecting.com

  Results from FactBites:
 
Industries of Cumbria - Iron Mining (0 words)
The iron industry has slowly matured within the Lake Counties for centuries, with industrial growth spreading from the small bloomery and forge sites, coastal plateau workings and the narrow veins of the fells to the huge mining and iron smelting complexes of the late 19th and 20th centuries.
The iron ore was extracted by overhead stoping and removed from Nab Gill by way of an inclined tramway to the main line.Gill Force and Gate Crag mines on the south side of the valley were the second major producer, served by a branch line from the Railway.
Archaeological evidence determines that ore was smelted in the vicinity of Urswick during the Iron Age by indigenous Celts.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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