Geometallurgical study of a gravity recoverable gold orebody
Dominy, SC; O'Connor, L; Glass, HJ; et al.Xie, Y
Date: 29 April 2018
Journal
Minerals
Publisher
MDPI
Publisher DOI
Related links
Abstract
Sheeted vein gold deposits are often characterised by multiple sub-parallel veins and
free-milling coarse gold. Inherent mineralisation heterogeneity results in grade and process parameter
variability, which increases project risk if not quantified. Measured grade variability is often
exacerbated by poorly designed sampling and ...
Sheeted vein gold deposits are often characterised by multiple sub-parallel veins and
free-milling coarse gold. Inherent mineralisation heterogeneity results in grade and process parameter
variability, which increases project risk if not quantified. Measured grade variability is often
exacerbated by poorly designed sampling and testwork protocols. Protocols that are optimised
within the framework of the Theory of Sampling (TOS) to suit the ore type, together with quality
assurance/quality control systems, will reduce variability and provide fit-for-purpose results.
Geometallurgy can be broadly split into two key approaches: strategic and tactical (or operational).
The strategic approach focuses on the whole orebody and long-term life-of-mine view, whereas tactical
geometallurgy relates to a more short- to medium-term view during mining. The geometallurgical
approach requires spatially distributed samples within a deposit to support variability modelling.
Diverse attributes from core logging, mineralogical/textural determination and small-scale tests are
used to measure variability. This contribution presents a case study that emphasises an early-stage
strategic geometallurgical programme applied to a gravity recoverable gold (GRG) dominated deposit.
It exemplifies how data can be acquired from a well-designed and planned programme to support
resource estimation, a pre-feasibility study, trial mining and fast-track to production. A tactical
geometallurgical programme is embedded into the mine operation.
Camborne School of Mines
Collections of Former Colleges
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