A Different Method Of Modeling A Mineral Deposit For A Three-Dimensional Open Pit Computer Design Application

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Marc Lemieux
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
16
File Size:
544 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1977

Abstract

Computer pit design techniques generally make use of models in which the deposit is represented by a regular array of data. Using a regular system, the number of data points required to represent the air, waste and mineralization in a large deposit become excessive. The number of blocks used to describe the deposit is dependent upon the block size. The quality of the pit wall slope design also is dependent upon the block size used and the method of defining the slope. The error associated with reserve calculations becomes greater with increasing block size. A deposit model consisting of variable sized air and mineralized blocks has been developed at the University of British Columbia and improved upon at Climax for pit design work. The method permits put- ting the entire model in core for rapid data processing. This permits the use of a versatile cone generation technique which allows close adherence to variable slope constraints in all directions. The conical shape is approximated by rectangles on each level which equal the area of the ideal conical intersection. The shape of the intersection may vary from approximately circular to elipsoidal. The approximate cone shape is controlled by the slope constraints applicable at the point of intersection on the bench. The overall modeling technique greatly assists the pit design engineer in developing a high quality pit design.
Citation

APA: Marc Lemieux  (1977)  A Different Method Of Modeling A Mineral Deposit For A Three-Dimensional Open Pit Computer Design Application

MLA: Marc Lemieux A Different Method Of Modeling A Mineral Deposit For A Three-Dimensional Open Pit Computer Design Application. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1977.

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