In Situ Measurements and Monitoring for Waste Rock Piles

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Lee Barbour
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
14
File Size:
154 KB
Publication Date:
Nov 1, 2002

Abstract

Waste-rock piles from metal mining operations are comprised of large surface deposits of unsaturated, coarse-grained soil and rock. The unsaturated condition and heterogeneous, coarsegrained nature of these deposits make them difficult to monitor or characterize. Key parameters that must be evaluated include; volume-mass relationships (e.g. water content, air content, porosity, density, degree of saturation, grain-size), transport properties (e.g. air-permeability, gas diffusion, hydraulic conductivity), geochemistry (e.g. solids, gas, and fluid phases) and soilatmospheric fluxes (water and gas). This paper describes some of the techniques that have been developed to characterize waste rock piles for uranium mines in Northern Saskatchewan. For each technique, the method of measurement is described, and preliminary field data are presented and discussed.
Citation

APA: Lee Barbour  (2002)  In Situ Measurements and Monitoring for Waste Rock Piles

MLA: Lee Barbour In Situ Measurements and Monitoring for Waste Rock Piles. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2002.

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