MINING Review notes from fossil fuels - coal. MINING Diamond mine, Siberia Largest hole Diamond mine, South Africa Largest hand-dug hole.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 16 Review Mining.
Advertisements

Section 3: Mining Regulations and Mine Reclamation
Minerals and the Environment. The Rock Cycle Definitions Mineral –a solid homogenous (crystalline) chemical element or compound; naturally occurring.
Lesson 13.2 Mining More than a ton of waste may remain after extracting just a few hundredths of an ounce of gold.
MINING: The process of obtaining mineral resources from the Earth
Mining and Mineral Resources
Environmental Science Catalyst 4/15/14  Go to class website: and scroll down to Catalysts. Complete the questions and press.
Mineral and Energy Resources
Subsurface Mining. What are mineral resources? Concentrations of naturally occurring solid, liquid, or gaseous material in or on the earth’s crust in.
Rocks, Minerals, Mining.
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE mining $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ COST TO – FIND – EXTRACT – PROCESS.
Mining and Mineral Resources
Mineral Formation & Extraction Ch. 14. We can make some minerals in the earth’s crust into useful products, but extracting and using these resources can.
WasteSection 3 Section 3: Hazardous Waste Preview Bellringer Objectives Types of Hazardous Waste Resource Conservation and Recovery Act The Superfund Act.
APES Lesson 7 - Demogrphy
Mining And its environmental impact. What determines the type of mining? Underground v.s. Surface Mining v.s. Solution Underground v.s. Surface Mining.
Section 3: Mining Regulations and Mine Reclamation
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.
Mining and the Environment. Questions for Today ► What is ore and what are examples of useful ores extracted from the crust? ► What are the different.
Earth Science Daily Challenge, 11/30 There will be a TEST on Minerals and Mining this WEDNESDAY. What QUESTIONS do you have about minerals and mining or.
 Kalgoolie, Australia  Salt Evaporation Ponds.
Earth Systems Chapter 8. Earth history What’s here now has been here all along Layers: ▫Core – solid inner, liquid outer ▫Mantle – made of magma ▫Crust.
New Mexico Uranium Exploration & Mining BLM Uranium Workshop August 12, 2008 Salt Lake City, Utah Holland Shepherd, Program Manager Mining Act Reclamation.
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.
WasteSection 3 Types of Hazardous Waste Hazardous wastes are wastes that are a risk to the health of humans or other living organisms. They may be solids,
ENVIRONMENTAL MINING ISSUES Acid Mine Drainage(AMD)  Pyrite (any sulfide) + Water = sulfuric acid  FeS 2 + H 2 O H 2 SO 4 + Fe  Aka sulfide.
Mining. I. Mineral Resources A.A mineral resource is a concentration of naturally occurring material from the earth’s crust that can be extracted and.
Youtube 1872 Mining Law and pollution and restoration (best) 6 min
Impacts of Mining, Mining Regulations & Mine Reclamation.
Mining and Mineral Resources. B. Describe the different types of mining and associated processes a. First step: Find an ore deposit! Companies use instruments.
EARTH & SPACE SCIENCE Chapter 7 Resources and Energy 7.4 Resources and Conservation.
Mining Overview. The General Mining Act (GMA, 1872) Signed by President Ulysses S. Grant. Allowed miners who claimed minerals on federal public land to.
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.
Chapter 16: Mining and Mineral Resources
MINING. Example: Coal Example: Gold Ore Example: Iron Ore (steel!)
Chapter 27 Minerals and the Environment. Mining Removal of minerals & fossil fuels from the Earth’s crust.
+ Mining and Extraction Lecture. Lecture Purpose: Learn how we mine and extract the ores and minerals we use every day. Think about the sustainability.
Mining & Mineral Resources
MINING. Mineral Resource: Naturally occurring material in or on Earth’s crust that can be extracted and processed into useful materials for a profit.
Bellringer. Types of Hazardous Waste Hazardous wastes are wastes that are a risk to the health of humans or other living organisms. – They include: solids,
16.3. Bellringer The Environmental Impacts of Mining Because of the potential environmental impact of mining on a large scale, mining is one of the most.
Chapter 16: Mining and Mineral Resources SEV4. Students will understand and describe availability, allocation and conservation of energy and other resources.
Mining and Mineral Resources. What is a mineral? Naturally occurring Inorganic solid Characteristic chemical composition Orderly internal structure Set.
DO NOW: How do we use the land? Identify as many ways as you can.
Surface Mining APES.
Mining Is used to extract valuable minerals from the earth
Section 3: Mining Regulations and Mine Reclamation
Mining Wastes Wilbert Aureo.
Mining and Mineral Resources
Abandoned uranium mine
Mining.
Section 3: Mining Regulations and Mine Reclamation
Classroom Catalyst.
Nonrenewable Mineral Resources
Do Now: Journal In your journal, write a half-page reflection about the following quote: “The meek shall inherit the Earth but not the mineral rights.”
Section 3: Mining Regulations and Mine Reclamation
Sora Oyaizu Bodas, Period 6 5/2/18
Section 3: Mining Regulations and Mine Reclamation
Chapter 16 Section 3: Mining Regulations and Mine Reclamation
Objectives Describe seven important potential environmental consequences of mining. Name four federal laws that relate to mining and reclaiming mined land.
Section 3: Mining Regulations and Mine Reclamation
MINING.
Objectives Describe seven important potential environmental consequences of mining. Name four federal laws that relate to mining and reclaiming mined land.
What are the environmental implications?
Mining.
Advanced Placement Environmental Science
Mining and Mineral Resources
Presentation transcript:

MINING Review notes from fossil fuels - coal

MINING Diamond mine, Siberia Largest hole Diamond mine, South Africa Largest hand-dug hole

Text Largest copper mine Utah

Some mined minerals other than coal

Mine tailings TAR CREEK OKLAHOMA Chat piles Damage from lead & zinc mines

TAILINGS - waste after ore has been processed. Often dumped in a “tailing pond” to allow sedimentation. Left to leach in soils or runoff into streams. Also called mine dumps. OVERBURDEN - materials located above mined minerals that is removed. How are tailings & overburden similar? different?

ACID MINE DRAINAGE (AMD) Acid mine drainage from gold mine in South Africa water with pH<5 with high concentrations of metals, from (usually abandoned) metal or coal mines SUBSIDENCE - to sink or settle down. Southeast of Picher, OK

MINING - ONE CAUSE OF SUBSIDENCE Centralia, PA after fire in coal mine Fire started in As of May 2012, still burning.

LEACHATE Leach: Make a soluble substance drain away from soil by percolation. Leachate: Liquid that passes through matter, extracting materials from the material through which it passes. Leachates are also created from factories, landfills and composting sites.

Tar Creek “Beneath it All” KOTV, 2011 Part I Part III Part Part III Picher 2012er 2012

What was found in high levels in children’s blood? What does elevated lead levels cause? What is subsidence? What causes sinkholes in this area? Describe the groundwater. How long has Picher been a “Superfund” site? How was contaminated soil “remediated”? What problems resulted?

Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation & Liability Act of 1980 (CERCLA OR SUPERFUND) Amended in 1986 Enacted to address abandoned hazardous waste sites. TAR CREEK - first site (worst) Run by the EPA

ORE - rock containing minerals, including metals that is extracted through mining. Metal ores - usually oxides, sulfides or silicates, not a pure metal Ores must be processed to extract metals Ores deposits may be due to volcanic activity, hydrothermal activity, sedimentary activity (alluvial for example) or other

Most processing techniques are variations of 1. crushing the ore into small pieces 2. heating the ore to liquify the metal 3. pouring off the liquid metal

Mining Laws & Regulations General Mining Law, 1872 Materials Disposal Act, 1947 Surface Resources Act, 1955 Federal Land Policy & Management Act, 1976 Surface Mining Control & Reclamation Act, 1977

General Mining Law, 1872 To mine you must demonstrate there is a valuable mineral deposit Show proper use or occupancy to support mining operations Have title to the claim Have performed $500 worth of improvements on claim Enacted to promote the exploration % development of domestic mineral resources, mostly in the West. U.S. citizens can freely prospect for minerals on federal lands, stake a claim and obtain a patent. These claims then become private property for a small fee This law is hotly debated? Why?

Materials Disposal Act, 1947 Govern the disposal & removal of certain mineral waste materials

Surface Resources Act, 1955 Decides whether mining claims before 1955 are free from restrictions. Governs the disposal and removal of certain mineral wast materials

Federal Land Policy & Management Act, 1976 Requires a validity determination before a mine plan can be approved. Regulated by the Bureau of Land Management

Surface Mining Control & Reclamation Act, 1977 Designed to prevent & repair environmental damage from coal strip mining. Requires miners to obtain a permit & submit a detailed reclamation plan