Applicability of the Hit for Evaluating Comminution and Geomechanical Parameters from Drill Core Samples – The Odyssey Project Case Study

- Organization:
- Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
- Pages:
- 15
- File Size:
- 1165 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2017
Abstract
In the mining industry, decisions regarding the type and number of comminution tests to be completed typically rely on geologists? observations and conclusions when studying drill cores. Given that these decisions are based on visual observations, they are essentially approximate and often inaccurate from a comminution viewpoint, causing a sizeable margin of error in estimating characterization test needs. Consequently, companies are often forced to perform more tests than necessary, requiring a significant quantity of material, and accruing significant costs. Recently, a new device, called the Hardness Index Tester (or HIT), was developed, offering users a low cost in-house mechanism for estimating the comminution parameter A*b and the Bond Ball Mill Work Index at any mine site, with potential applications on fragments up to 25 mm from drill core. In late 2016, Agnico Eagle Mines Limited initiated a trial to investigate if having an HIT device installed in a core repository would make it possible to identify the different rock properties more accurately and determine the number and type of comminution tests required. The application of the HIT was not to replace the standard comminution tests, but rather to generate a high number of comminution and geomechanical parameters for the rock mass. Ultimately, the objective would be to determine the uniformity of the rock mass and, therefore, easily distinguish any potentially problematic zones. With this method, the appropriate number of standard tests could be determined, making the HIT not only an excellent complement to the standard laboratory tests, but also an indispensable device for a geometallurgical characterization. This paper presents the results from the HIT trial using samples from the Odyssey Project, which is a Mine Canadian Malartic property.
Citation
APA:
(2017) Applicability of the Hit for Evaluating Comminution and Geomechanical Parameters from Drill Core Samples – The Odyssey Project Case StudyMLA: Applicability of the Hit for Evaluating Comminution and Geomechanical Parameters from Drill Core Samples – The Odyssey Project Case Study. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2017.