The Mechanization Of Rock Drilling At Inco

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
G. R. Green
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
21
File Size:
1543 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1972

Abstract

The centre of the mining operations of the International Nickel Company, Ontario Division is Sudbury, a city of 160,000 population located 240 miles northwest of Toronto (Fig. 1). Within thirty miles of this city and located around the rim of the geological formation known as the Sudbury Basin are the ten underground mines and one open pit operated by the Company (Fig. 2). There are also four developing mines, three in the Sudbury area and one at Shebandowan, near the city of Thunder Bay, Ontario and approximately 150 miles north east of Duluth, Minnesota. In 1971 the mines produced 22,800,000 tons, 20,600,000 tons from underground and the balance from open pits. Also located in the Sudbury District are facilities to extract and refine the metals contained in the ore. There is a nickel refinery located at Port Colborne on Lake Erie. An additional nickel refinery is under construction near Sudbury. Fifteen elements are recovered from the Sudbury ores, nickel, copper, iron, sulphur, gold, silver, cobalt, tellurium and the six platinum group metals, platinum, palladium, iridium, rhodium, ruthenium and osmium. In 1966 a major expansion program was undertaken to meet increasing market requirements. Coinciding as it did with a severe
Citation

APA: G. R. Green  (1972)  The Mechanization Of Rock Drilling At Inco

MLA: G. R. Green The Mechanization Of Rock Drilling At Inco. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1972.

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