Biological Field Treatment Applications in Gold Heap Leach Closures

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 6
- File Size:
- 904 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1990
Abstract
The heap leach process used for recovering gold from oxide and sulfide ores is operated as a closed circuit system in which the cyanide process solutions are continuously recycled. In a well-designed operation there is little or no discharge of cyanide to the environment. Spent leached ore residues are water washed to remove most of the trace cyanides and precious metals remaining after completion of cyanide leaching. After the washing step, small amounts of cyanide, metal-cyanide complexes and nitrates remain in the residue. Most of the cyanide and nitrate residue constituents exist in the pore water of the spent ore rather than in the solid mineral fraction.
More than 90% of the complexed cyanides in a freshly washed ore residue are present as free cyanide or weakly complexed metal-cyanides. Natural volatilization and decomposition rapidly remove most of these easily dissociable cyanides from the spent ore. Only the stable, strongly complexed metal-cyanides, such as gold, cobalt or the ferrocyanides and other constituents such as nitrates have a long term persistence in the spent ore residue (Towill et al).
Despite washing and natural removal mechanisms, spent ore has the potential to act as a point source of complexed cyanides and nitrates for soil and groundwater contamination if inadequately contained (Huiatt et al). The groundwater contamination is caused by the leaching of the soluble cyanide compounds and nitrates from the pore water of the residue.
Citation
APA:
(1990) Biological Field Treatment Applications in Gold Heap Leach ClosuresMLA: Biological Field Treatment Applications in Gold Heap Leach Closures . Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1990.