Abstract
In the course of ore mineral treatment large amounts of mineral residues will be deposited in tailings dams. The spilled material might contain some amount of valuable as well as hazardous material. The spilling process generates vertical and lateral mineral and grain size fractionation. Mine tailings show therefore distinct chemical and mineralogical pattern along the spilling path and across the same completely different from the initially spilled material. Spilling pulses and migrating spilling points cause local enrichment of individual phases such as sulphides, micas, etc. After deposition these finely laminated mine tailings are exposed to alteration. Alteration is not homogeneous. The variable degree of water saturation and the position of the oxidation front are basically due to inclination of lamina, and to changes in grain size along the transport path. But even at the relatively coarse rim intercalated fine grained lamina change the hydraulic properties, creating capillary barriers, lamina with enhanced water retention capacity etc. Alteration occurs in microenvironments at the boundaries of lamina contrasting in grain size, porosity, saturation, mineralogy, redox, pH, and chemistry. The dissolution, oxidation, and hydration of minerals cause a loss and gain of volume, respectively, generating micro-porosity within minerals and clogging pores at different positions. In this paper optical microscopy, automated mineralogy using a FEI-ESEM-based MLA system on dry polished thin sections and image analysis are combined to define characteristic features such as porosity, primary and secondary phases, grain size, and mineral assemblages for individual lamina to highlight boundaries of contrasting features being responsible for the development of micro-hardpans. The aim is to develop new strategies for auto-remediation, and to localize zones of anomalous enrichment of potentially valuable metals.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Rammlmair, D (2002): Hardpan formation on mining residuals. In: Merkel, B, Planer-Friedrich, B, and Wolkersdorfer, C (editors). Uranium in the Aquatic Environment. Proc. Int. Conf. Uranium Mining and Hydrogeology III and International Mine Water Assocation Symposium, TU Bergakademie Freiberg, Germany, 15–21 Sept. :173–182.
Graupner, T, Kassahun, A, Rammlmair, D, Meima, JA, Kock, D, Furche, M, Fiege, A, Schippers, A, and Melcher, F (2007): Formation of sequences of cemented layers and hardpans within sulfide-bearing mine tailings (mine district Freiberg, Germany). Applied Geochemistry (22):2486–2508.
Tichomirowa, M, Pelkner, S, Junghans, M, and Haubrich, F (2002): Sulfide oxidation at the polymetallic sulfide deposit Freiberg (Germany) and consequences for heavy metal mobilization. In: Schulz, HD, and Hadeler, A (editors): Geohemical processes in soil and groundwater measurement–Modelling– Upscaling, GeoProc 2002, Wiley–VCH, Weinheim : 356–379.
G.E.O.S. (1993): Freiberg Ingenieurgesellschaft mbH. Kurzbericht zur Gefährdungsbschätzung der Davidschcht-Spülhalde, Freiberg, März1993.
Rammlmair, D, Wilke, M, Rickers, K, Schwarzer, RA, Möller, A, and Wittenberg, A (2006): Geology, mining, metallurgy. In: Beckhoff, B, Kanngießer, B,. Langhoff, N, and Wedell, R (editors): Handbook of Practical X-Ray Fluorescence Analysis., Springer, Heidelberg. Chapter (5.6): 640–687.
Fandrich, R., Gu, Y, Burrows, D, and Moeller, K (2007): Modern SEM-based mineral liberation analysis. International Journal of Mineral Processing (84):310–320.
Courtin-Nomade, A, Brila, H, Neela, C, and Lenain, J-F (2003): Arsenic in iron cements developed within tailings of a former metalliferous mine—Enguialès, Aveyron, France. Applied Geochemistry (18): 395–408.
Ahn, JS, Park, YS, Kim, J-Y, and Kim, K-W (2005): Mineralogical and geochemical characterization of arsenic in an abandoned mine tailings of Korea. Environmental Geochemistry and Health (27): 147–157.
Dutrizac, JE, and Jambor, JL (2000): Jarosites and their application in hydrometallurgy. In: Alpers, CN, Jambor, JL, and Nordstrom, DK (editors): Sulfate Minerals: Crystallography, Geochemistry, and Environmental Significance. Reviews in Mineralogy and Geochemistry, Vol. 40: 405–452.
Haffert, L, and Craw, D (2008): Mineralogical controls on environmental mobility of arsenic from historic mine processing residues, New Zealand. Applied Geochemistry (23):1467–1483.
Dove, PM, and Rimstidt, JD (1985): The solubility and stability of scorodite, FeAsO4.2H2O. American Mineralogist (70): 838–844.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2012 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
About this paper
Cite this paper
Redwan, M., Rammlmair, D. (2012). Understanding Micro-Environment Development in Mine Tailings Using MLA and Image Analysis. In: Broekmans, M. (eds) Proceedings of the 10th International Congress for Applied Mineralogy (ICAM). Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-27682-8_70
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-27682-8_70
Published:
Publisher Name: Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg
Print ISBN: 978-3-642-27681-1
Online ISBN: 978-3-642-27682-8
eBook Packages: Earth and Environmental ScienceEarth and Environmental Science (R0)