Dreams of Futures Past – Curating Post-mining Landscapes

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
A Hine P A. Kirsch
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
18
File Size:
20487 KB
Publication Date:
Jul 16, 2014

Abstract

Mining is a major global industry that requires the moving of considerable volumes of earth and rock (overburden) to win the valuable ore prior to mineral extraction and processing. As a result of this process, new landscapes are created, both extracted voids and overburden piles, as well as infrastructure for management of mine operations, wastewater, tailings, other raw materials, transportation and extreme rainfall events. Resource companies must develop and obtain regulatory approval for detailed plans that manage this displaced material through all phases of the life-of-mine and rehabilitate the site at the time of closure (including landform stability, revegetation and ongoing management).Individual mine sites operate in long time frames (ten to 50 years), with several mines often operating in the same region, generating cumulative overburden volumes and heavily altering the original landscape. These impacts are universally framed as a negative consequence of the industry, especially by modern society that values natural (and some agricultural) landscapes as pristine and almost sacred. Overburden and tailings are also seen as a problem, and are a significant business cost to mining practice.This paper looks to investigate perceptions of mining and post-mining landscapes, questioning the aesthetically driven emphasis on the ‘natural’. It proposes instead an opportunity to reframe the way we look at overburden and landscape impacts from mining, exploring the possibility of imagined post-mine landscapes unburdened by traditional aesthetic expectations. These landscapes, to be conceived by regional stakeholder roundtables, have the capacity to be built by regional mining consortia as a foundation for sustainable post-mining economies.Post-mine regeneration offers both the motivation and the basic materials to create an altogether new environment from a blank slate. Few circumstances allow the opportunity to truly explore a re-envisioning of the land on a huge scale, and the possibilities merit serious consideration.CITATION:Hine, A?and Kirsch, P?A, 2014. Dreams of futures past – curating post-mining landscapes, in Proceedings Life-of-Mine 2014 , pp 121–138 (The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy: Melbourne).
Citation

APA: A Hine P A. Kirsch  (2014)  Dreams of Futures Past – Curating Post-mining Landscapes

MLA: A Hine P A. Kirsch Dreams of Futures Past – Curating Post-mining Landscapes. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2014.

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