Valorisation of mine waste - Part I: Characteristics of, and sampling methodology for, consolidated mineralised tailings by using Witwatersrand gold mines (South Africa) as an example.

2021 
Abstract The quest for steady primary supplies of critical raw materials (CRMs) creates significant waste, which is inevitably generated at each phase of mining and mineral processing. Waste from extraction, separation and refinement of non-renewable natural resources is accumulated globally and creates not only environmental hazards but also economic possibilities. Mine waste management is an expensive and prolonged task but unavoidable. Mine tailings, especially historical ones, can contain economically feasible resources, and given the right condition, such tailings could be reutilised through a waste valorisation concept. A prominent example are the Witwatersrand gold mine tailings in South Africa, which have been reused in small-scale projects. Tailing reutilisation is only possible if a sound classification, sampling and resource modelling framework is established to thoroughly and accurately profile the economic, environmental, health and geometallurgical aspects. Our study on valorisation of mine waste is presented in two parts: Here, in Part I, we focus on the essential components of a mine waste valorisation framework that includes the characterization and development of a systematic sampling framework for consolidated mineralised tailings. The development of a mine waste valorisation framework will hopefully enable worldwide reduction and reutilisation of mine waste.
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