Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Mineral Resources Resource Use • U.S. has 5% of World Population • U.S. Consumes 1/4 of World Resources But • U.S. Produces 1/4 of Global GDP But • Much of our GNP is consumed internally Mineral Resources • Building • Metallic Minerals Stone, Sand, Gravel, – Non-ferrous: Copper, Limestone Zinc, Tin, Lead, Aluminum, Titanium, Manganese, • Non-metallic Minerals Magnesium, Mercury, Sulfur, Gypsum, Coal, Vanadium, Molybdenum, Barite, Salt, Clay, Tungsten, Silver, Gold, Feldspar, Gem Minerals, Platinum Abrasives, Borax, Lime, • Energy Resources Magnesia, Potash, Phosphates, Silica, – Fossil Fuels: Coal, Oil, Fluorite, Asbestos, Mica Natural Gas • Metallic Minerals – Uranium – Ferrous: Iron and Steel, – Geothermal Energy Cobalt, Nickel Three Emerging Resource Problems • Lithium (Batteries) – Evaporites (Bolivia) – Pegmatites (Lepidolite, Spodumene) • Rare Earths (Electronics) – Col-Tan and Congo Civil War – Chinese Monopoly – California mine to reopen • Phosphorus (Fertilizer) – Morocco, China, South Africa, Jordan, U.S. = 90% The Elements Types of Ore Deposits Magmatic • Pt, Cr, Fe, Ni, Ti, Diamond Pegmatite • Li, Be, U, Rare Earths, Feldspar, Mica, Gems Hydrothermal • 600 C: W, Sn • 400 C: Au, U, Ag, Co, Mo • 200 C: Cu, Zn, Cd, Pb • Cool: Hg, As Sedimentary Rocks • Fe, Cu, U, Mn, Mg Weathering • Secondary Enrichment: – Cu, Ni • Soils – Al, Ni • Evaporites Placer • Pt, Au, Sn, Ti, W, Th, Rare Earths U (Fossil), Gems Concentration Factors and Economics • Natural Abundance • Geologic Processes to Concentrate Element – Most involve water • Intrinsic Value of Material • Cost of Extraction from Earth – Gold versus Gravel Prospecting and Exploration What we’re looking for is subtle. Satellite and Aerial Photography Remote Sensing Geological Mapping Magnetic Mapping Gravity Mapping Radioactivity Mapping Geochemical Sampling Electrical Sounding Ground-Penetrating Radar Seismic Methods – Reflection - Detailed but Expensive – Refraction - Cheap but Not Detailed Core Sampling and Well Logging Drill Core Geologic Map of Wisconsin Gravity Map of Wisconsin Magnetic Map of Wisconsin Satellite Image of Wisconsin Economic Factors in Mining • • • • • Richness of Ore Quantity of Ore Cost of Initial Development Equipment, Excavation, Purchase of Rights Operating Costs: Wages, Taxes, Maintenance, Utilities, Regulation • Price of the Product • Will Price Go up or down? Life Cycle of a Mine • Exploration • Development • Active Mining – Excavation – Crushing, Milling, Flotation, Chemical Separation – Smelting and Refining – Disposal of Waste (Tailings) • Shut-down Issues in Mineral Exploitation Who Owns (Or Should Own) Minerals? • Landowner, • Discoverer, • Government Unclaimed Areas: • Sea Floor, • Antarctica Who Controls Access for Exploration? • Remote Sensing vs Privacy Problems of Mining Safety • Mine Wastes • Pollution • Dust • Noise Economic Impact • "Boom and Bust" Cycles Environmental Problems • Exploration • Construction and Operation • Waste Disposal • Sulfur (H2 SO4 ) Sulfur • Present in sulfide ores, pyrite or organic sulfur in coal, organic sulfur in petroleum • Smelting or burning create SO2 • 2SO2 + O2 2SO3 • H2 O + SO3 H2 SO4 Sulfuric Acid • Contributor to Acid Rain – Neutralized by carbonates and mafic igneous rocks – Worst in granitic bedrock • Weakens tailings piles, slopes, dams • Acidifies surface water • Contributes to dissolved metals