Continuous Mining Equipment Cuts Costs at Waste Storage Project
    
    - Organization:
 - Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
 - Pages:
 - 3
 - File Size:
 - 413 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jan 7, 1980
 
Abstract
Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical Corp. (KACC) had been discharging spent bauxite-generally referred to as red mud-into the Mississippi River for almost 20 years when, in 1972, it agreed to store the waste solids on land. KACC decided to utilize a DREW system (decantation, drainage, and evaporation of water) where the spent bauxite is deposited in a large drying bed, surrounded by a 9-m-high levee. At the bottom of the bed, corrugated, perforated plastic pipe is encased in filter sand.    The company built one DREW bed at Gramercy, LA, in 1973 and a second at Baton Rouge in 1974 using draglines, tractors, and rubber-tired scrapers. When a third bed was needed in 1977, the estimated construction cost using draglines was judged too high and KACC personnel began searching for a better, less expensive method for constructing the levee. A bucket-wheel excavator and conveyor system     was selected and has proved to be less costly than more traditional earth-moving systems.
Citation
APA: (1980) Continuous Mining Equipment Cuts Costs at Waste Storage Project
MLA: Continuous Mining Equipment Cuts Costs at Waste Storage Project. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1980.