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What is uranium

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Title: What is uranium


1
What is uranium?
Virginia T. McLemore New Mexico Bureau of Geology
and Mineral Resources New Mexico Institute of
Mining and Technology, Socorro, NM
2
Outline
  • Introduction
  • Mine life cycle
  • Safety
  • Geology
  • Economics
  • Sustainable development

3
Introduction
4
Conversions
  • An ore grade of 1 U3O8 is equivalent to 0.848 U
  • 1 million lbs U3O8 are equivalent to 385 metric
    tonnes of U

5
Uranium
  • Hard, dense, metallic silver-gray, naturally
    occurring element
  • Atomic number 92
  • Atomic weight 238.02891
  • Ductile, malleable, poor conductor of electricity
  • Discovered in 1789 by Martin Klaproth in Germany
  • Named after the planet Uranus

6
  • Uraniumthe highest atomic weight of the
    naturally occurring elements.
  • Approximately 70 more dense than lead and is
    weakly radioactive.
  • Uraninite, chief ore of uranium and radium, is a
    highly radioactive mineral.
  • Helium was first discovered on the earth in
    samples of uraninite. Radium and helium are found
    in uraninite because they are the principle
    products of uranium's decay process.

7
Radioactive isotopes
  • Like other elements, uranium occurs in isotopes
    (16) differ from each other in the number of
    particles (neutrons) in the nucleus.
  • Natural uranium as found in the Earth's crust is
    a mixture largely of two isotopes
  • U-235 (0.7)
  • U-238 (most abundant, 99.3)

8
Uses
  • Nuclear power plants to generate electricity
  • Other applications
  • Nuclear weapons
  • X-ray targets for production of high-energy
    X-rays
  • Photographic toner
  • Analytical chemistry applications
  • Yellow glass ware and ceramics (historical use)

9
Uses for depleted uranium
  • Yacht keels
  • Counterweights
  • Armor piercing ammunition
  • Radiation shielding (1.7 denser than Pb)

10
Most uranium today is used for nuclear power
generation
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13
NUCLEAR POWER PLANTS http//www.insc.anl.gov/pwrma
ps/map/world_map.php
14
Why is uranium important for providing
electricity?
15
Mine Life Cycle
16
The Mine Life Cycle
Source John Gadsby, Vancouver BC, 2002
17
Mining Life Cycle (Spiral?)
Closure
Ongoing Operations
Post-Closure
Temporary Closure
Exploration
Future Land Use
Mine Development
Operations
?????
18
Nuclear Power Plant
Interim Storage
?
Fuel Fabrication
Long-term storage
Enrichment
Nuclear Fuel Production Process After Investing
in the Great Uranium Bull Market,
StockInterview.com, 2006
UF6 Conversion
Mining and Milling
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20
Legacy Issues
21
3 Mile Island Facts (1979)
  • No one died
  • All litigation claims for physical harm were
    denied in court
  • One reactor shut down
  • 7 nuclear reactors in 4 locations in eastern
    Pennsylvania
  • Pennsylvania 36 of its energy comes from nuclear
    power2nd behind Illinois

22
Chernobyl Facts (1986)
  • 100 people died
  • 50 tons of radioactive dust and debris scattered
    around the nearby Ukrainian countryside
  • 18 mile circle designated Chernobyl Exclusion
    Zone
  • Pockets within this zone are at normal radiation
    levels
  • At first cows were unable to produce offspring,
    but now are able tono mutilated cows

23
Discovery to Development
  • Typical Timeline
  • gt10 years
  • Recent Real Life Examples
  • Langer Heinrich, Namibia (Paladin Resources)
  • Discovery 1973
  • Production 2007
  • Cigar Lake, Canada (Cameco)
  • Discovery 1981
  • Production ?

24
Uranium Exploration/Mining Company Risks
  • Political
  • Permitting
  • NGOs
  • Nationalization
  • Technical
  • Infrastructure
  • Project Viability
  • Equipment
  • Labor
  • Economic
  • Uranium Price
  • Financing

25
Global Challenges
Production Source WNA.
26
How does uranium exploration and mining differ
from other commodities?
27
SAFETY
28
Radon Problem
  • 1 Working Level (WL) 100 pCi/L radon in air
  • 1 Working Level Month (WLM) working 1 month at
    1 WL.
  • Current MSHA exposure limit 0.3 WL or 4 WLM per
    year.
  • EPAs household exposure limit 0.02 WL
  • 1987 NIOSH proposed standard 1 WLM per year.

29
Radon Problem
  • If the International Commission on Radiation
    Protection standards were adopted by the US, it
    is estimated that 50 of coal and m/nm mines
    could be out of compliance.
  • How do we measure and control radon in
    anticipation of lower standards in the future?
  • Radon levels vary upon where in the mine you are
    working.

30
Current International Standards
WLM Working Level Months
Working level (WL) is any combination of
short-lived radon daughters in 1 liter of air
that will result in the ultimate emission of
1.3x105 MeV of potential alpha particle
energy. Working level month (WLM) means an
exposure to 1 working level for 170 hours (2,000
working hours per year/12 months per
yearapproximately 170 hours per month).
31
Gather the historic data on uranium miners
health Identify health and safety concerns
relevant to uranium mining employees.
32
Penetration Abilities of Different Types of
Radiation
Alpha Particles Stopped by a sheet of paper but a
hazard in the lungs
Radiation Source
Beta Particles Stopped by a layer of clothing or
less than an inch of a substance (e.g. plastic)
Gamma Rays Stopped by inches to feet of
concrete or less than an inch of lead
Neutrons Stopped by a few feet of concrete
33
Identify, evaluate and develop personal and area
radon progeny monitoring instrumentation
34
Geology and mining of sandstone uranium deposits
35
What did we do the last go-around?
  • In the U.S. we followed the prospectors, then,
    using mostly empirical sandstone models with some
    assumptions we expanded exploration within the
    old districts and beyond.
  • We argued about uranium source, transport,
    precipitation and other critical criteria but
    mainly we kept to the recipe.
  • Can we keep playing in the sandbox and find
    enough U3O8 for a burgeoning power industry?

36
Before you can explore for sandstone uranium
deposits, you must know what they are and
understand a conceptual model of their
distribution and formation!
37
Sandstone uranium deposits
  • Epigenetic concentrations of uranium minerals
    occurring as uneven impregnations and minor
    massive replacements in fluvial, lacustrine, and
    deltaic sandstones
  • Low to medium grade (0.05 - 0.4 U3O8)
  • Small to medium in size (ranging up to a maximum
    of 50,000 tons U3O8)

38
Sandstone uranium deposits
  • Medium to coarse grained sandstones
  • Includes mudstones through conglomerates
  • Well-sorted, permeable, unmetamorphosed clastic
    sediment
  • Quartzose to feldspathic to arkosic compositions
  • Some hosts have varying amounts of volcanic
    debris
  • Humid, subtropical, tropical climates

39
Sandstone host rocks
  • Reduced hosts are light-gray to green to white
  • Oxidized hosts are light brown to red (state of
    Fe oxidation)
  • Good transmissivity
  • Deposits are localized where sandstonemudstone
    ratios are 11

40
Fluids
  • Low temperature ground waters
  • Although only a few fluid inclusion studies of
    sandstone deposits have been published, they
    indicate that the fluids were less than 100
    degrees C and low salinity (lt10 NaCl)(Poty and
    Pagel, 1988)

41
Uranium precipitated under reducing conditions
  • Carbonaceous materials
  • Plant matter
  • Humates
  • Hydrocarbons
  • Pyrite or other sulfides
  • Interbedded basic volcanics with abundant
    ferro-magnesian and other minerals (eg chlorite,
    zeolites, clay, TiO2)

42
Types
  • Tabular
  • Precipitated at chemical interfaces between a
    connate pore fluid (most likely a brine) and an
    infiltrating fluid (meteoric)
  • remnant-primary deposits
  • Roll front
  • Precipitated at the redox interface of a single
    extrinsic solution passing through reduced
    pyrite-bearing sandstone
  • Fault related

43
Uranium ore
  • Uraninite and coffinite are primary minerals
  • Urano-organic complexes
  • Secondary uranium minerals
  • Fine-grained
  • Occupy intergranular spaces
  • Locally replace fossil wood and bones
  • Typically follow bedding, but do cross cut
    bedding
  • Well define boundaries, but gradations are common

44
Geochemical signature
  • U, V, Mo, Se, locally Cu, Ag, Cr, Ra.
  • Anomalous radioactivity from daughter products of
    U.
  • Low magnetic susceptibility in and near tabular
    ores.

45
Sandstone U geochemistry
Western USA
46
Tectonic setting
  • Fluvial-lacastrine systems formed on foreland
    bordered by a magmatic-arc subduction zone on one
    side and intracratonic sea on the other
  • Fluvial-lacustrine systems in intermontane basins
    formed by later tectonic adjustments in foreland
    regions
  • Fluvial-shoreline systems of marginal marine
    plains

47
Continental settings or marginal plains or marine
basins
  • Channel
  • Lagoonal
  • Beach-bar

48
Distribution
  • Sandstone uranium deposits are found on every
    continent
  • Silurian and younger
  • Time of first development of vascular land plants
  • Largest found in Permian, Jurassic, Tertiary, and
    Cretaceous rocks

49
Source of uranium
  • Internal and external sources
  • Mostly igneous source (granite or volcanic ash)

50
Sedimentation Provenance
  • Granitic
  • Felsic (acid) volcanic

51
World class uranium deposits require
  • Source of uranium
  • Mineralizing process
  • Favorable deposition
  • Preservation of the deposits

52
Mining methods
  • Conventional open pit mines
  • Conventional underground mines
  • Room and pillar
  • Stope
  • In-situ leaching
  • Acid solutions
  • Carbonate solutions

53
http//www.wma-minelife.com/uranium/insitu/insituf
r.htm
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55
Milling
  • Acid leach for low lime ores
  • Alkaline leach calcareous ores
  • Ion-exchange
  • Solvent extraction

56
References
  • IAEA-TECDOC-328, 1985, Geological Environments of
    sandstone uranium deposits
  • AAPG Studies in Geology 22, 1986, A basin
    analysis case study The Morrison Formation
    Grants uranium region, New Mexico

57
Present and future economics
58
Uranium Outlook 2007-2008, StockInterview.com
59
Three Uranium Price Booms
60
Pelizza and McCarn (2002)
61
Uranium Outlook 2007-2008, StockInterview.com
62
Uranium Outlook 2007-2008, StockInterview.com
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65
Production Woes Continue
  • Cigar Lake mine delayed until at least late 2011
  • Sulfuric acid shortage in Kazakhstan will lead to
    production cutbacks in 2008 and 2009
  • Kazatomprom, AREVA, Cameco and Uranium One
    impacted
  • Rabbit Lake mining halted due to water inflow

Uranium Market Overview December 2007
66
Production Woes Continue
  • New projects experience ramp-up problems
  • Paladins Langer Heinrich and Uranium Ones
    Dominion below production targets
  • BHP Billiton expansion of Olympic Dam expected to
    cost more and potentially be delayed
  • Political situation in Niger not positive for
    existing and new producers

Uranium Market Overview December 2007
67
Growth in non-Western Demand
Russia
China
India
Uranium Market Overview December 2007
68
MAJOR COMPANIES IN THE URANIUM INDUSTRY 2005
http//www.321gold.com/editorials/kettell/kettell
060104.html
69
2006 World Production Shares by Production
Company
Uranium Market Overview December 2007
70
Concentration of Primary Uranium Production
  • Largest 5 mines supply 51 of global primary
    production.

Source WNA.
71
Capital Markets Support A Necessary Requirement
72
Access to Capital Key Factors
  • Capital is most accessible in a stable and/or
    rising price environment.

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http//www.wise-uranium.org/umaps.html
75
http//www.wise-uranium.org/umaps.html
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77
UNITED STATES URANIUM PRODUCTION AND CONSUMPTION
1980, 2005
78
http//www.wise-uranium.org/umaps.html
79
U.S. uranium exploration drilling
Total gt 500,000,000 Feet
80
Sustainable Development
81
What is sustainable development?
  • Development that meets the needs of the present
    without compromising the ability of future
    generations to meet their own.
  • Sustainable development is not about sustaining
    the life of a mine. Instead it is about
    sustaining the flow of materials.

82
Continued supply of natural resources to
manufacture and produce products that society
demands
  • Recycling
  • Re-use
  • Less use
  • Materials replacement
  • Alternative product design
  • Mining of new resources

83
It is not easy to meet societys needs without
changing the landscape somewhere and affecting
local communities.
84
The challenge is provide society with its needs,
protect future resources, alter the landscape and
affect local communities as little as possible.
85
Risk Hazard Outrage
  • Terminology from Sandman, Peter M. (1993)
    Responding to Community Outrage Strategies for
    Effective Risk Communication, American Industrial
    Hygiene Association, Fairfax, VA. 142 pp
  • In short
  • Hazard is what risk assessors call Risk
  • Outrage is all the things that people worry about
    and that the experts ignore
  • Outrage suggests strong emotion and suggests that
    the emotion is justified

86
The Disconnect
  • Experts
  • Risk focus on hazard and ignore outrage
  • High hazard and low outrage overestimate the
    risk
  • Low hazard and high outrage underestimate the
    risk
  • Public
  • Risk focus on outrage and ignore hazard
  • High hazard and low outrage underestimate the
    risk
  • Low hazard and high outrage overestimate the
    risk

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