Borehole Mining Of Manganese At Subzero Temperatures

International Marine Minerals Society
Gregory Abramov
Organization:
International Marine Minerals Society
Pages:
4
File Size:
1104 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2011

Abstract

Borehole Mining (BHM), a remotely-operated waterjet mining method (Figure 1), has recently achieved two major milestones. It was, for the first time, applied to the extraction of manganese ore and at temperatures below freezing. The 1St stage is a demonstration test that is now underway just north of Emily, Minnesota, where the manganese ore is located 100-160m below the surface and its reserves are estimated to be in excess of 500,000 tons. The deposit was discovered over 60 years ago but, due to the fragile and sensitive nature of this Land of 10,000 Lakes (nickname for the State of Minnesota) and strong environmental restrictions, the iron/manganese reserves were deemed unrecoverable and remained untouched until late 2010 when permission for a single-hole demo-test was issued by the local Department of Natural Resources.
Citation

APA: Gregory Abramov  (2011)  Borehole Mining Of Manganese At Subzero Temperatures

MLA: Gregory Abramov Borehole Mining Of Manganese At Subzero Temperatures. International Marine Minerals Society, 2011.

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