Innovation in Rock Mechanics: Iced Tailings As Structural Backfill for the Citronen Mine, Ironbark Zinc Ltd., Greenland

- Organization:
- International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
- Pages:
- 5
- File Size:
- 889 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2012
Abstract
The Citronen Zinc-Lead Project is one of the world?s largest undeveloped zinc-lead resources, containing more than 13 billion pounds of zinc and lead metal. The project is located in northern Greenland, a self-governed region of the Kingdom of Denmark (Figure 1). Citronen is the northern-most mine in the world, operating at a latitude of 83o 3? N. In excess of 67,000 meters of diamond drilling have been completed to delineate the resource. As of January 2012, the measured, indicated, and inferred reserves for the Citronen project totaled 70.8 million tonnes, consisting of 5.7% zinc + lead (3.5% zinc cut-off) (Ironbark, 2012). For the underground mine plan, room-and-pillar and long holestoping mining methods were selected. The beneficial application of structural fill was considered for increased recovery, efficient tailings disposal, and ground control. Three types of fill were compared - paste fill, cemented rock fill, and iced tailings. An environmental and economic feasibility study concluded that iced tailings was the preferred alternative provided it met the ground control requirements. The purpose of this paper is to explain the investigatory steps that led to the possibility for the use of iced tailings as structural fi
Citation
APA:
(2012) Innovation in Rock Mechanics: Iced Tailings As Structural Backfill for the Citronen Mine, Ironbark Zinc Ltd., GreenlandMLA: Innovation in Rock Mechanics: Iced Tailings As Structural Backfill for the Citronen Mine, Ironbark Zinc Ltd., Greenland. International Conference on Ground Control in Mining, 2012.