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Mineral Formation & Extraction Ch. 14
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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.

Dec 25, 2015

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Page 1: 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.

Mineral Formation & Extraction

Ch. 14

Page 2: 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.

We can make some minerals in the earth’s crust into useful products, but extracting and using these resources can disturb the land, erode soils,

produce large amounts of solid waste, and pollute the air, water, and soil.

Page 3: 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.

How are minerals used?

Mineral UseSilver Photography, chemistry,

electronic products, jewelry, coins

Titanium Jet engines, powder for white paint pigment, paper, rubber

Limestone ConstructionHalite Diet (salt), sodium

hydroxide, ceramic glazesGraphite Dry lubricant, brake linings,

pencils

Page 4: 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.

Mineral

• Element/compound of elements naturally occurring in the crust

• EX. Steel = Iron & Carbon Bronze = Tin & Copper Copper Sulfur

Page 5: 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.

Where are minerals found?

• Rocks – combinations of minerals• Ore/ore body – concentrated

mineral chunk that can be mined for profit

Page 6: 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.

Ore/Ore Body

High Grade• Large amounts of

particular mineral

Low Grade• Small Amounts of

minerals

Page 7: 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.

Classification of Minerals

• Mineral resources include: –Metallic–Non-metallic– Energy Resources

Non-renewable

Page 8: 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.

Classification

Metallic• Iron, Copper,

Aluminum– Malleable– Lustrous– conductors

Nonmetallic• Sand• Stone• Phosphates• Salts

Page 9: 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.

Classification

• Energy Resources– Coal–Oil–Natural Gas– Uranium

Page 10: 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.

How do minerals form? Name Description

Magma Concentration As magma cools, separates into layers based on differences in densities (iron on bottom, silicates on top)]

Fe, Cu, Ni, Cr

Hydrothermal Processes - Ore deposits - Black smokers

Heated groundwater seeps through cracks/fissures dissolving minerals in rocks which get transported with water

Au, Ag, Pb, Zn

Page 11: 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.

How do minerals form?

Magma

Black smoker

Sulfidedeposit

White crab

Tube worms

Whitesmoker

Hydrothermal ore also occur when upwelling magma solidifies into black smokers

Especially rich in Cu, Pb, Zn, Ag, Au

Page 12: 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.

How do minerals form? Name Description

Sedimentation Weathering breaks down parent rock into particles which are transported by water and deposited into beds

Fe, MN, P, S, Cu

Evaporation Dissolved material accumulates in inland lakes/seas with no/small outlets – evaporation occurs leaving behind mineral deposits.

NaCl, borax, gypsum salts

Page 13: 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.

How are minerals discovered and extracted?

1. Prospecting2. Mining/Extractions3. Smelting/Processing

Page 14: 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.

1. Prospecting

Finding places where ores occur.

Is it profitable to mine? $$$$

Page 15: 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.

Prospecting Tools

• Satellite Imagery• Aerial Sensors (magnetometers)• Gravity Difference (gravimeter)• Core Sampling• Seismic Surveys• Chemical analysis of water &

plants

Page 16: 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.

2. Mining Extracting

Surface• Less $• Open Pit• Strip Mining• Safer for miners• Environmental

Damage

Subsurface• More $$$• Shaft• Slope• Hazardous for

miners• Less Environmental

Damage

Page 17: 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.

Surface Mining

• Mechanized equipment strips overburden of soil & rock

• Discards it as waste called spoils• In US: – 90% of nonfuel mineral & rock

resources– 60% of coal by weight

Page 18: 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.

Surface Mining Types

Open-pit mining

Page 19: 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.

Open-pit mining

Surface Mining Types

Page 21: 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.

Surface Mining Types

Page 22: 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.

Surface Mining Types

Contour Strip Mining

Page 23: 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.

Undisturbed land

Overburden

PitBench

Spoil banks

Page 24: 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.

Surface Mining Types

Mountaintop Removal

Page 25: 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.

Mountaintop Coal Mining in West Virginia

Fig. 14-17, p. 359

Page 26: 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.

Ecological Restoration of a Mining Site in Indonesia

Fig. 14-18, p. 360

Page 27: 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.

Subsurface Mining

Used to remove coal and various metal ores that are too deep to be extracted by surface mining

Page 28: 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.

Subsurface Mining

• Shaft• Slope–Disturbs less

land– Produces less

waste–More

dangerous–More expensive

Page 30: 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.

Surface mining

Metal ore Separation of ore from gangue

Smelting Melting metal

Conversion to product

Discarding of product

Recycling

Life Cycle of a Metal Resource

Page 31: 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.

Environmental Implications

Remember: Mining is an economical activity.

Page 32: 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.

Environmental Implications

Decisions to mine depend on: - Financial risk- Potential profit- Risk of environmental damage- Economic viability of mineralNOT A SIMPLE ISSUE!

Page 33: 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.

Natural Capital Degradation

Extracting, Processing, and Using Nonrenewable Mineral and Energy

ResourcesSteps Environmental Effects

Mining Disturbed land; mining accidents; health hazards; mine waste dumping; oil spills and blowouts; noise; ugliness; heat

Exploration, extraction

Processing Solid wastes; radioactive material; air, water, and soil pollution; noise; safety and health hazards; ugliness; heat

Transportation, purification, manufacturing

Use Noise; ugliness; thermal water pollution; pollution of air, water, and soil; solid and radioactive wastes; safety and health hazards; heat

Transportation or transmission to individual user, eventual use, and discarding

Page 34: 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.

Environmental Implications

Page 35: 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.

Environmental Effects of Extracting (Mining) and

Processing

Fig. 15-7 p. 344

Page 36: 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.

• Land damage of surface and vegetation

• Water use threatens supplies of groundwater

• Water quality damage: heavy metals are leached resulting in acid mine drainage

• Gangue: worthless material that surrounds, or is mixed with minerals in an ore deposit.

Environmental Effects of Mining/Extraction

Page 37: 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.

Environmental Effects of Mining/Extraction

• Tailings: mine waste from impurities in ore can be toxic

• Air pollution from smelting plants

• Energy requirements of equipment, processing, refining, labor intensive, etc.

• Subsidence or collapse

Page 38: 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.

Environmental Effects of Using a Mineral Resource

a) Disruption of land surface 500,000 mines

b) Subsidencec) Erosion of solid mining wasted) Acid mine drainage

H2SO4

e) Air pollution Mining produces more toxic emissions than

any other industry

f) Storage and leakage of liquid mining waste

Page 39: 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.

Legislation

• Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act of 1977– Requires mining companies to

restore most surface-mined land so it can be used for the same purpose as it was before it was mined

– Levied a tax on mining companies to restore land that was disturbed by surface mining before the law was passed.

Page 40: 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.

Legislation

• General Mining Act of 1872– allowed individuals/corporations to

stake claims to mine metals on federal lands at $2.50 to $5 per acre

– cheap land for developing the western US by patenting

– law contains no provision for env. protection or reclamation of topsoil/vegetation/habitat

Page 41: 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.

Fun Facts

EX. In 1995 ASARCA (US company) paid $1,745 for land that produced $2.9 billion worth of minerals (Cu/Ag)

EX. 1993 Manville Corp. paid $10,000 for land in Montana that contains about $32 billion of palladium and platinum

Of the ~1200 Superfund sites (the nations worst toxic waste sites) about 52 are mines.

Page 42: 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.