Chapter 15 1.Stone Age 6,000 BC to 2,000 BC 2.Bronze Age 2,500BC or 1,000AD to iron age 3.Iron Age - most by 1,000BC Stone = differently shaped rocks Bronze.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 16 Review Mining.
Advertisements

Gold Mining: Is It Sustainable
What is it? Why do we do it? What does it do to the Earth? How can we be more sustainable? Mining.
Chapter 16 Minerals: A nonrenewable resource Minerals Elements or compounds that occur naturally within the Earth’s crust. Ex- Al, Cu, Mg, Zn, Fe, S,
Minerals: A Nonrenewable Resource Chapter 16. A spectacular slide show presentation by Mr. Berkheimer and some very, very special guest speakers!
Minerals and Mining. Minerals Concentration of naturally occurring elements in/on Earth. Formed over millions of yrs  non-renewable resource.
Mining Contamination in the Rocky Mountains By Kaley Williams.
Nonrenewable Resources
Acid Mine Drainage. Terms Acid Mine Drainage (AMD) –Water that is polluted from contact with mining activity Acid Rock Drainage (ARD) –Natural rock drainage.
Minerals and the Environment. The Rock Cycle Definitions Mineral –a solid homogenous (crystalline) chemical element or compound; naturally occurring.
Summitville Gold Mine Disaster
MATTER CYCLING IN ECOSYSTEMS
Chapter 16 Nonrenewable Mineral Resources – Part 2.
Environmental Science Chapter 16 Review
Mineral Jeopardy Mineral Properties Mineral Formation Mineral Classification Mineral Identification Mining Minerals
Mining and Mineral Resources
Geology and Nonrenewable Minerals Chapter 14. We Use a Variety of Nonrenewable Mineral Resources  Mineral resource Fossil fuels Metallic minerals Nonmetallic.
Chapter 16: Mineral Resources and Mining Mr. Manskopf Notes also at
Minerals: A Nonrenewable Resource Chapter 16. Introduction to Minerals Concrete – sand, gravel, crushed limestone Salt Copper.
Chapter 29 Minerals and the Environment. LIST EVERYTHING THAT IS IN A PENCIL.
Earth Science 2.2 Minerals.
15 Mineral Resources. Overview of Chapter 15  Introduction to Minerals  Environmental Impact Associated with Minerals  An International Perspective.
How do we know if something is a mineral?
Mining and related Issues Chapter 14 Lecture #3 Sections
Mineral Resources & Mining
Ecological Cycles Biosphere Carbon cycle Phosphorus cycle Nitrogen
Chapter 16 Somerset, PA will construct five ponds using ShoreGuard vinyl sheet piling. The first two settling ponds the iron mixes with oxygen. The next.
Do Now: What is mining? Why do we mine?. Aim: What Are Mineral Resources, and What Are their Environmental Effects? Concept 14-3 We can make some minerals.
Mineral Resources. Where Minerals Are Found  The Earth’s crust is made up of mostly common rock forming minerals combined in various types of rock. 
Chapter 15 Mineral Resources. Introduction to Minerals  Minerals  Elements or compounds of elements that occur naturally in Earth’s crust  Rocks 
Mining Enviro 2 Go Mining Objectives- You should be able to: Describe several methods of mining Describe important potential environmental consequences.
Chapter 16 Minerals/Mining.
Chapter 27 Minerals and the Environment. Importance of Minerals to Society Standard of living increases with availability –Success in locating, extracting,
Two more examples of Human Footprint- Nat’l Geo video Watch and discuss.
 Kalgoolie, Australia  Salt Evaporation Ponds.
MINING Review notes from fossil fuels - coal. MINING Diamond mine, Siberia Largest hole Diamond mine, South Africa Largest hand-dug hole.
Chapter 16 Minerals: A Non-renewable Resource
Agenda: Self-Grade FRQ Homework using Rubric Death of a Pine Reading Mining Lecture Homework: No homework tonight There will be multiple assignments to.
Mineral Resources. Nonrenewable Mineral Resources Earth crust = Minerals + rock Minerals –inorganic compound that occurs naturally in the earth’s crust.
Youtube 1872 Mining Law and pollution and restoration (best) 6 min
How we get our minerals and rocks
Mining. It’s a mineral if it… Is naturally occurring Is an inorganic compound Has specific physical and chemical properties (melting point, density, hardness)
Mineral Resources. What is a mineral resource? Any [ ] of naturally occurring material in or near the Earth’s crust. – Can be extracted and processed.
Economic Geology. Mineral resources  Renewable  Can be replaced in a humans life time  Non-renewable  Limited supply  Can not be replaced in a humans.
Question of the Day 2/7 What are ways to reduce waste? What are ways to reduce waste? Anyone know what happened in France in the past week? Think dumpster.
MINING. Mineral Resource: Naturally occurring material in or on Earth’s crust that can be extracted and processed into useful materials for a profit.
The Formation, Mining, and Use of Minerals
Lecture Outlines Physical Geology, 14/e Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Plummer, Carlson &
Looking Back…. What do you remember about minerals? What are they?
Mining Is used to extract valuable minerals from the earth
Minerals & Mining Lesson 3.
Minerals: A Nonrenewable Resource
4.1 Energy & Mineral Resources
Minerals and the Environment
Mineral Resources.
Earth Materials Mining Mining Process.
Abandoned uranium mine
Mining.
Nonrenewable Mineral Resources
15 Mineral Resources.
Mining.
Mining and Mineral Resources
What are the environmental implications?
Chapter 16 Minerals: A Non-renewable Resource
Mining.
15 Mineral Resources.
Minerals: A Nonrenewable Resource
Mining and Mineral Resources
Lecture Outlines Physical Geology, 14/e
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 15 1.Stone Age 6,000 BC to 2,000 BC 2.Bronze Age 2,500BC or 1,000AD to iron age 3.Iron Age - most by 1,000BC Stone = differently shaped rocks Bronze = Copper and Tin Steel = iron and carbon What age are we in now?

Mining law Promoted development & settlement of western public lands 1.File claims to hard rock minerals at $ an acre / keep all profits / no royalties to… 1. Supersedes all other uses of the land or designations 1.Legacy of law - superfund sites / acid drainage / 40% all headwaters contaminated in west 1.Colorado has about 23,000 abandoned hard-rock mine sites - more than 500,000 nation wide

Open Pit Mining

Heap Leaching Cyanide for Gold

Acid Mine Drainage

Sulfides exposed to air & water = sulfuric acid 1.Somerset, PA will construct five ponds using Shore Guard vinyl sheet piling. 2.The first two settling ponds the iron mixes with oxygen. 3.The next two ponds contain limestone to remove the acid. 4.Pond five will capture any remaining metals. 5.Then it will flow through a wetland before entering Indian creek. Pyrite Iron Sulfate Acid Mine Drainage = Perpetual Pollution

Heap leaching Cyanide Sulfuric Acid Hg – Gold Amalgamation

Ducktown Tennessee Burra Burra Mine 1960’s 300 Acres left unforested as a reminder – view on Google Earth Picher Oklahoma & Chat Piles:

Copper Basin (Ducktown, TN) Reclamation Problem: 1.Mine Operated Acid Precipitation 3.50 square miles turned to waste 4.Dams lost 25% storage capacity Solution: ’s remediation failed - kudzu 2.16 Million Acid tolerant pine and grass seeds broadcast 3.Added lime and fertilizer 4.Cost $ per acre (32K acres) 5.Erosion went from 200 tons to 8 annually 6.Target completion date 2000

Smelting Coke:Hydrocarbon heated to remove volatiles to get pure carbon.

Phytoremediation - Thlaspi 1.Absorbs Zinc & Cadmium 2.Has an ability to concentrate heavy metals in plant parts AdvantagesDisadvantages Works on a variety of organic and inorganics May take several years to remediate Easy to implementRestricted to shallow sites Low CostDependent on Climate Environmentally friendly Possible impacts on food chain Pleasing to the eyeHarvest can be classified as hazardous waste Reduces waste to landfill Human consumption of food a concern

Summitville Colorado History: Gold Discovered Claims 3.By K lbs gold heap leached pyritic ore with cycanide on 73 acre pad 5.Activated Carbon used to extract minerals from leachate 6.By K lbs gold & 640K silver removed from 500acres of ore Company declares bankruptcy 8.30 Million Paid in Settlement 9.17 Mile stretch of river all life million clean up Why are minerals located here?

Mineral Formation 1. Magmatic concentration - as magma cools it separates with silicates rising and iron, nickel, & copper sinking - layered by density 2. Hydrothermal processes - dissolved minerals mix with salts to form a metal-bearing complex - gold, silver, copper, lead & zinc 3. Sedimentation - dissolved minerals are deposited manganese, copper, sulfur & phosphorus - warm meets cold 4. Evaporation - lakes without outlets salt, borax, potassium, gypsum Metallic and Non-Metallic Minerals Source / Transport / Trapping

Salt Flats Hydrothermal Mineral Deposits

Kaolin Chattahoochee, Ocmulgee, Oconee and Savannah Rivers where inland shipping was stopped by falls or rapids at the Fall Line. Uses: paper, food additive, toothpaste, cosmetics…

Geology

Ore Vs Product

Hydraulic Mining

Hard Rock Mining

Stone MT. in Bloom Diamorphia Smallii Confederate Daisy

The Law Surface Mining Control & Reclamation Act of 1997 Only covers coal SMCRA created two programs: 1.Regulation of active coal mines 2.Reclamation of abandoned mines funded by tax on current mines

Reserve Vs Resource Reserves: 1.Have been located and quantified 2.Can be extracted with current technology 3.Can be extracted profitably Resource: 1.Not yet quantified but located 2.Future technology may make accessible To Deep or under ocean 3.Not profitable under current technology Low Grade Contaminated Drilled out as a reserve source

Cost Benefit Analysis Weigh the cost and benefit of mining…Montana

Future Trends 1. Deep Oceans - international waters 2. Antarctica - should we - will we 3. Biomining 4. Undiscovered Deposits

International Sources - Stockpiling The United States has discovered nearly $1 trillion in untapped mineral deposits in Afghanistan, including huge veins of iron, copper, cobalt, gold and lithium.

Will We Run Out? 1.New Discoveries 2.Replacement Materials - plastics 3.Changing global economy 4.Technology Changes 5.Conservation