What is Mining Waste dumps - tailings and overburden

What is Mining Waste dumps (Tailings and Overburden) 

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Overburdened

Goa’s mining waste dumps are choking its streams, destroying forests and farmlands and killing people.

For every tonne of iron ore mined in Goa, three tonne of waste material gets generated. Over a period of 55 years of mining in Goa, it is estimated that hundreds of millions of tonnes of waste and overburden, low-grade ore and tailings have accumulated around mining areas. In most of the mines, overburden and tailings is not properly stored and managed. Forests in Goa have been hugely affected by overburden – mountains of overburden can be seen all over forests, and even in protected areas. A case in point is the Netravati sanctuary. Coupled with the fact that dense vegetation on the steep slopes of the Western Ghats has been destroyed by the decades of relentless mining, the overburden gets washed away during monsoons, and finds its way into homes, farms and local water bodies. Mining wastes is one of the reasons for the devastation of forests and farmlands in Goa. 

A deluge in 2002 led to the collapse of mining reject dumps in six mines, which destroyed the Advoi river. 

Silt from the dumps covered residential houses and around 100 hectares (10,00,000 sq.mtrs. 1 hectare is 10,000 sq.mtrs) of agricultural land in Pissurlem and neighbouring villages. 

The dumps are also an occupational hazard. Six workers were killed on December 9, 2006 when iron ore mining waste dumps collapsed in Tollem mines in Goa.The nearly 100 metre (m) high overburden dumps – covering an area in a 200 m radius – gave way, burying the excavating machines as well as the operators beneath them. The landslide was so sudden that those trapped were unable to even react. Military personnel were called in for rescue operations. A case of negligence was filed against the board of directors and managers of the mine. The low priority given by mine operators to overburden management culminated in this tragedy. Cases like these abound; many are not ever reported.

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Mine Tailings

Last Modified: 10th October 2014

Mine tailings are the ore waste of mines, and are typically a mud-like material.
Worldwide, the storage and handling of tailings is a major environmental issue.  Many tailings are toxic and must be kept perpetualy isolated from the environment.  Scale of tailings production is immense, since metal extraction is usually only ounces or pounds, for every ton of ore.  Tailings containment facilities are regarded as the world's largest man-made objects.


Terminology

Mine tailings' size and composition depends on the mining method.  For hardrock metal mines, tailings are usually a very fine mud or powder, which is left over after ore is crushed and valuable minerals are extracted from it.  Tailings may also contain chemicals used for mineral extraction.
Tailings are distinct from “waste rock”, which is the non-ore rock which miners move and discard as they dig down to access the underlying ore.  They are also distinct from soil and organic matter (collectively known as "overburden"), which is removed from the surface above the ore deposit.
Oil sands production also produces tailings, which are substantially different.  Oil sands tailings are the residue which remains after bitumen is separated from virgin oil sands.  Although this article focuses on hardrock tailings, oil sands tailings can contain a similarly complex and toxic brew of minerals and chemicals, and pose a similar handling and storage challenge.

Disposal

Disposal of mine tailings is usually the single biggest environmental concern facing a hardrock metal mine, and creates very long-term environmental liabilities which future generations must manage.  Many mine tailings do not become appreciably safer over time, if stored properly, and therefore must stored for an indefinite period using current technology.  
The historically-used alternative to storage was to dispose of tailings in the most convenient way possible (such as river dumping), which led to widespread environmental contamination in mining areas.  This was nominally viable in earlier eras, but human production of mine tailings has increased by several orders of magnitude in the modern age, making such methods unacceptable to many societies.

 Hazardous Properties

Toxic chemicals used to extract the valuable materials from the ore, such as the cyanide used in gold mining, remain in the tailings at the end of the process, and may leach out into ground water.  Rock may naturally contain dangerous chemicals, such as arsenic and mercury, which leach into water much more readily after rock has been ground up and exposed to the wind and the rain.
Acid mine drainage is the most frequent and widespread problem.  Many hardrock mines (including most gold mines) extract minerals that are bound up with sulfide compounds.   These compounds produce sulfuric acid on contact with air and water, a process that occurs at a very low rate in undisturbed rock, at a higher rate in unprotected waste rock (which has a large surface area and is now exposed to air) and a much higher rate in unprotected mine tailings which have a massive surface area.  The result can be the production of very acidic water, which additionally leaches metals and other chemicals from the surrounding rock.


Wet Storage in Pits & Lakes

Most modern hardrock metal mines dispose of tailings as a wet mud, held in pits lined with clay or a synthetic liner.  Many mines put the tailings back into the original mining pit.  Some large mines use entire existing valleys sealed off with earthen dams, and others store tailings in natural lakes.  In most cases, disposal pits are covered with water, forming an artificial lake which reduces the rate of acid formation. 
Wet storage often requires long-term oversight, to monitor and attempt to mitigate contaminated groundwater movement, and to maintain any crucial facilities, such as dams.  Many wet storage facilities require perpetual water treatment.


On-Land Storage ("Dry-Stack")

In "dry-stack" disposal, tailings stored in dry form, typically by burial in a covered and lined pit.  In this regard, dry-stack storage is more similar to a modern, sealed landfill.  This method takes up much less space, is less susceptible to earthquake hazards, and doesn’t require active water treatment.  This makes it particularly relevant in locations where precipitation, earthquake risk are high, or space is limited. 
However, dry-stack disposal has much higher up-front costs than wet storage.  Dry-stack tailings must be dried, and the solid tailings must be transported by truck or conveyor instead of by slurry pipeline, which adds logistical complexity and cost.  
Pits covers for dry-stack storage, like the damns around artifical lake impoundments, must be maintained in perpetuity.  However, the long-term maintenance is much less than it is for large, wet tailings impoundment with dams. 
In Alaska,  Pogo MineGreens Creek Mine, and Nixon Fork Mine use dry-stacking for tailings disposal.  In contrast, the Fort Knox and Red Dog mines use artifical wet impoundments with earthen dams, and Kensington Mine stores its tailings in a natural lake.




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