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Legal Issues Canada, USA

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Title: Legal Issues Canada, USA


1
MINERAL EXTRACTION
  • Legal Issues Canada, USA
  • Exploration
  • Staking a Claim
  • Type of Ore
  • Extraction
  • Open Pit
  • Underground Mine
  • Strip mining
  • Solution Mining
  • Heap leach
  • Crushing
  • Separation Techniques
  • Gravity Separation
  • Flotation
  • Chemical Separation
  • Smelting

2
LEGAL CONTROLS USA
  • Mine Safety The Federal Mine Safety and Health
    Act (Mine Act) http//www.dol.gov/compliance/laws/
    comp-fmsha.htm
  • The Mine Act requires that the U.S. Department of
    Labor's Mine Safety and Health Administration
    (MSHA) inspect all mines each year to ensure safe
    and healthy work environments for miners.
  • In addition to setting safety and health
    standards for preventing hazardous and unhealthy
    conditions, MSHA's regulations establish
    requirements for
  • Immediate notification by the mine operator of
    accidents, injuries, and illnesses at the mine
  • Training programs that meet the requirements of
    the Mine Act and
  • Obtaining approval for certain equipment used in
    gassy underground mines.
  • The Mine Act covers all mine operators and miners
    throughout the United States, including the
    District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto
    Rico, the Virgin Islands, American Samoa, Guam,
    and the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands.

3
Mineral Exploration in the USA
  • The 1872 Mining Law was signed into law by
    President Ulysses S. Grant. Before Custer's Last
    Stand, it was passed to promote the development
    and settlement of publicly-owned lands in the
    western United States.
  • The Case for Mining Law Reform The New York
    Times, June 23, 2008 On June 17, the generally
    conservative commissioners of Lincoln County, New
    Mexico, terrified by the prospect of a big gold
    mining operation in the nearby Capitan Mountains,
    asked the Senate to amend the 1872 mining law to
    give local officials some say in the matter. Two
    days later, Representative Raúl Grijalva of
    Arizona urged the secretary of the interior to
    take emergency measures to protect lands adjacent
    to the Grand Canyon from uranium mining. And the
    day after that, three Western governors added
    their voices to the reform chorus.
  • Enticed by soaring prices in recent years for
    gold, silver, copper and uranium, mining
    companies have been filing claims at a record
    clip. But the General Mining Law of 1872, which
    governs them, is as flimsy as ever.
  • A relic of the boisterous era of Western
    expansion, the law gives hard-rock mining
    precedence over all other uses of the public
    lands, including conservation. It demands no
    royalties and provides minimal environmental
    protections. Its legacy, if it can be called
    that, is a battered landscape of abandoned mines
    and poisoned streams.
  • Recent rumblings suggest that mining law reform
    may be moving from the list of legislative lost
    causes to reality. Last fall, the House passed a
    good bill that would require companies to pay
    royalties, just as oil and coal producers do,
    strengthen environmental safeguards, give local
    officials a role in decision-making and allow the
    interior secretary to veto mines that threaten
    irreparable harm to the environment.
  • This leaves matters in the lap of the Senate,
    where the majority leader, Harry Reid, controls
    the agenda. Mr. Reid is a miner's son whose home
    state of Nevada depends heavily on mining, and it
    is hard to overstate his lack of enthusiasm for
    serious reform.
  • At the same time, his colleagues have not been
    putting much pressure on him. Senator Jeff
    Bingaman's Energy and Natural Resources Committee
    has held hearings, and Mr. Bingaman himself
    strongly favors reform. What Mr. Bingaman needs
    to do now is draw up an actual bill, get it
    approved in committee and ask Mr. Reid to
    schedule a vote.
  • That could break the logjam and change a law that
    has remain unchanged, for the worse, for 136
    years

4
Canada
  • Exploration, Extraction, Environmental Issues,
    Health and Safety in Canada is governed by
    Provincial Acts
  • e.g. Manitoba Mines and Minerals Act 1996
  • http//web2.gov.mb.ca/laws/statutes/ccsm/m162e.php
  • For Rocks and Minerals the act deals with
  • Ownership of mineral rights vs surface rights
  • Claims and leases of mineral rights
  • Access to land for prospecting and extraction
  • Compensation to owner of land
  • Environmental closure of all mines and quarries
    is the responsibility of the company except for
    aggregate
  • For Aggregate
  • There is a government levy of 10 cents per tonne
  • Closure of Quarry funded and controlled by Land
    Management Branch of Manitoba Department of
    Energy and Mines

5
EXPLORATION
  • Initially minimal impact
  • lines cut through forest
  • samples of rock, soil, vegetation collected
  • Mining camps in wilderness areas may leave
    refuse/oil drums
  • Drilling may cause environmental problems
  • Manitoban bush will soon regrow
  • Tundra and desert pavements are more vulnerable

6
Staking a Claim
7
EXTRACTION
  • Includes ore removal, primary crushing and waste
    rock removal and disposal.
  • Extraction method depends on
  • Value of the ore
  • Cost of Extraction
  • The shape and orientation of the ore body
  • The distribution of the ore mineral
  • The strength of the ore and surrounding rock
  • Location
  • Solubility of Ore
  • Social Issues related to mining town
  • temporary with fly in workers e.g. Ekati
  • or permanent like Leaf Rapids, Lynn Lake

Gold ore vein, Bissett
8
Types of Ore
  • Massive base metal Cu, Ni, Zn
  • Disseminated gold, diamonds

Native copper, Michigan
9
Bedded Ore bodies
Potash, Saskatchewan
Syncrude, Oil sands, Fort McMurray
Black Thunder Coal MineWyoming, USA
10
Extraction process depend on shape, position and
value of ore body
  • Open Pit
  • Strip Mining
  • Underground Mine
  • Dissolution potash, uranium,
  • In situ mobilization oil shale
  • Heap Leach

11
Open Pit
Bingham Canyon Cu Mine
The amount of waste rock to be removed to provide
reasonable gradient for trucks. Only efficient
for large ore bodies close to the surface Open
Pit can be useful for dumping mine waste at
closure
Ekati Diamond Mine
12
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13
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14
Strip Mining
Very efficient for high level flat lying ore
bodies. Overburden and top soil can be replaced
minimizing environmental damage
15
Dissolution potash, uranium In situ
mobilization sulfur, oil shale
NaCl or KCl dissolved in water
Acid in situ leach of metallic ore
Hot water or steam used to mobilize sulfur or oil
16
Heap Leach
Landusky, Montana, CN Heap Leach Gold Mine
1979-1996
17
Crushing
  • Ore bearing and non ore-bearing rock will be
    separated as soon as possible
  • What happens to non-ore-bearing rock?
  • Ore-bearing rock will be crushed to the size
    necessary to liberate the required mineral
  • Heap leach requires only very coarse crushing
  • Much finer crushing for gold and PGE as they
  • are enclosed within other mineral grains
  • Initial crushing underground
  • In mill, crushing in autogenous circuit with
  • feedback of large particles
  • Final crushing in rod or ball mills

18
Beneficiation (Extraction of metal from
rock/mineral)
  • Physical techniques
  • Gravity
  • Gold from quartz
  • Diamonds
  • Tantalum
  • Flotation
  • Sulphides from silicates
  • Cu and Ni sulphides
  • NaCl from KCl
  • Chemical Techniques
  • CN leaching
  • Roaster oxidizes sulphide to SO2
  • Smelting
  • Electrochemical Refining of pure metal
  • Consider the waste generated at each stage

19
Gravity Separation
Whiffle table
Separator
Fine grained waste goes to tailings pond. What
does it contain?
20
Flotation Cells
Ore becomes attached to air bubbles, float, and
are collected. Gangue sinks to the bottom of the
flotation cells and piped to tailings
pond Chemicals added include Frothers pine
oils alcohols promote the formation and
stability of bubbles. Collectors promote
adherence of air bubbles to the mineral.
Conditioners make the surface of the mineral
particle either more or less susceptible to
concentration. Activators e.g. copper sulfate,
lead nitrate, lead acetate Depressants e.g.
sodium cyanide, zinc sulfate
21
Chemical Separation
  • Cyanide leaching for gold
  • at pH 11
  • Gold retrieved by Merrill Crowe (precipitation on
    zinc dust)
  • or Carbon in Pulp (CIP) process
  • Roaster oxidizes sulphide to SO2
  • Releases metal for refining and SO2 to the
    atmosphere unless scrubbers are in place

22
Smelting
  • Separates remaining silicates from metals
  • Slag (molten silicates) pored off
  • Metal pored into bars or sent for final
    electochemical refining
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