Dylan McFarlane
d.e.mcfarlane@exeter.ac.uk
1
Background – ASM & Placers
Prospecting
Exploration & Development
Mining
Reclamation & Marketing
200 Pans = 1 cubic metre
1 cubic metre = 2 tonnes
1 gram Au = $50 US
10 flyspecks = 1 milligram (dust)
1 A colour = 1 – 2 milligrams (ball point pen)
There are no B or C colours, and no nuggets
> 1 cent
< $1
150 episodes over 5 seasons
5-10 minutes education - 30 minutes drama
Yukon miners better
History
Politics
Economics
Geography
Golden History:
Beauty, Power,Value
Peruvian Chacras -“gold farms”
Las Medulas in Northern Spain, mined 25 a.d.
Serra Pelada, Brazil 1980s
7
Stereotypes of ASM
(Artisanal & Small-
scale Mining)
8
Artisanal & Small-Scale Mining
Bigger industry than you may think:
• 20,000,000 directly employed
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
ASM Share (%) of Global Mineral
Production (ICMM 2012)
3TG
“Conflict
minerals”
2005 Artisanal Gold
Production (Tonnes)
Columbia 21.6
Mexico 7.4
Ghana 6.9
Brazil 6.1
Tanzania 5.0
Bolivia 3.5
Papua New Guinea 3.2
Rural development, alternative
livelihoods & ‘green gold’
Labour-intensive
Informal
Rudimentary tools & knowledge
Poverty-driven
Green, FairTrade Gold
Artisanal certified ethical standard (ARM) Social & Environmental standards $ Premium
Small mining is beautiful – MarcelloVeiga, UBC Professor
Placer Economics
Commodity Quantity Price ($ US) Value ($ US Million)Note
Alluvial Gold 6,300,000 ounces 1,250per ounce $ 7,875 7% of 90 Moz Hard Rock
Total (mod from USGS, WGC
etc)
Titanium 2,400,000 tonnes 900per tonne $ 2,160 High grade TiO2/FeTiO3 feed
(mod from Credit Suisse)
Zircon 1,200,000 tonnes 1,100per tonne $ 1,320
Diamonds 13,200,000 carats 300per carat $ 3,960 12% of 110 Mct gem (mod.
From Bain)
Tin 100,000 tonnes 25,000per tonne $ 2,500
40% of 250kt est. (mod from
ITRI)
$ 17,815
Also: REEs, critical metals (tungsten,coltan)
Significant Market & Good Prices
333
137
111
26
17
0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350
Iron
Gold
Copper
Silver
Potash
Nickel
Phosphate
Zinc
PGMs
Diamonds
Others
Value of Global Metal Production 2011 ($ US Billion)
Source: ICMM 2012
Rafal Swiecki (http://www.minelinks.com/) 15
19th Century Gold Rushes
Rafal Swiecki (http://www.minelinks.com/) 16
20th/21st Century Gold Rushes
Fairbanks, 8 Moz
Nome, 6 Moz
14 mining regions
67 mining districts
Over 25 Moz historic
2014 est.
230 mines
140 operate
70,000 oz
Gold is whereYOU find it
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Portable sluice box
Pan the Creek
HistoricWorkings?
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Hand-stacked cobbles –YES! High-grade potential
Historic cut-off grade for hand working - ground sluicing 1 opcy
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Paystreak Areas
Flood Gold
False Bedrock & Paleochannels
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Geophysics? Unlikely…
Ground Magnetometer – variable success, lots of false positives. Metal detecting is
a hobby.
Seismic – successful in simple, homogenous conditions (Valdez Creek 460,000
ounces placer gold) but can be expensive, complex
Ground Penetrating Radar – Same, but less success
LIDAR – Useful in characterizing geomorphology and locating features (channels,
terraces, historic workings) but too expensive. Satellite imagery good enough.
Drilling must be done anyway, so most operators don’t bother with the distraction,
complexity, risk, and high costs.Cheap methods needed.
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Geochemistry & Geomorphology
Again – not much use yet…
Geochemistry
Defining gold signatures, lode mineralization types,
spatial and temporal evolution
 Identify hard-rock lode sources
Geomorphology & Grain Morphology
Morphology: Particle Size & Shape = Distance
Magadan success  Arc GIS today?
Flume tank modelling to understand deposition
Improve knowledge of geological controls, better models
WhiteChannel Gravels inYukon
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Panning
with a
Batea
Then,
drilling &
bulk
sampling
Portable Highbanker
Up to 1 m3 samples
1.5” Pump
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Pan Color Count
Color
Category
Abbreviati
on
Mass (mg) Description
Micro-
flyspeck
Mf 0.03 (30 = 1 mg) Cannot see 30cm away, must squint close-up;
fine dust; flat and flaky
Flyspeck F 0.1 (10 = 1mg) Specks visible 30cm away; flat or flaky
A Colour A 1-2 ~1mm diameter, ball-point pen sized
B Colour B 2-5 Up to ~2mm, elongate or spherical in 3
dimensions
C Colour C 5-25 Up to 3mm, smaller than pea grain, clunk
sound
Nugget Nug +25, weigh
individually
Heft in hand
31
Estimating Particle Mass Using Size Classification
Blue is Best
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Grades and Resources
• Measured in volume not
tonnage
• Square ft. of bedrock
• LOW GRADE:
• 0.3 g/m3……………0.01 oz/yd
(equivalent to 0.1 – 0.2 gpt ore)
• $10 per yard
• Fineness (850? 950? 700?)
• Cut-off pan: 2 mg
• 20 flyspecks, or:
• 1 – 2 ‘A’ colours, or:
• 1 ‘B’ colour, or:
• 60 micro-flyspecks
• 500 – 500,000 ounces
• 10,000 – 100,000 oz
• Depth?
• How much overburden-muck?
• 0 – 200 feet, 1000 ft.???
• Frozen or thawed?
• Multiple paystreaks?
• Old workings?
• Clay? Boulders?
• Fine grained or nugget, flat or
round grains?
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Camm 1988
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Placer Deposit Classification
Traditional classification based on environmental process nearest lode source:
• Eluvial & Coluvial
• Fluvial, Bench &Terrace
• Buried Channels
• Alluvial Fan, Floodplains
• Beach Strandline & Marine
• Rare: Desert, Glacial, Coastal Aeolian
Russian Classification: Gradient-Geomorphological & Aggradational-Degradational
(energy systems)  + 25 depositional categories
34Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Eluvial
• Weathering/Leaching in-situ on hill
slopes and outcrops
• Rain, wind, percolating waters, heat,
chemical and biological degradation
• Upgrading through removal of
soluble minerals or sheet flow
Colluvial
• Located at base of hill slopes
• Downslope movement of weathered
rock, wind, rain, freeze-frost action
• Poorly sorted and erratic grade and
size distribution
• Rarely economic
• Mkuvia placers in SouthernTanzania?
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Fluvial, Bench &Terrace: Stream Placers
Classic, most common, and most important
River, stream, creek, gulch and relicts (bench or terrace)
Lighter particles winnowed away while heavy minerals
concentrate on bedrock, or
• inside bends and areas of lower velocity-pressure -gradient
• Crevices, boulders and other natural traps
Slatey, vertical bedrock good; rough & irregular good.
Usually formed within few kilometers of source rock
• Grain morphology and inclusions to relate placer to lode (R.
Chapman, Mortenson, etc.)
With distance, particle sizes reduce and sorting improves,
UNLESS it is re-worked, glaciated, or disturbed
36Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Typical Profile
Waterfalls…Rarely
Gold Rush ‘Glory Hole’ Fail
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Deep, Buried Channels
• Can be High Grade!!!
• Valdez Creek, Alaska 1981
• Most productive in N.America
• 100,000 oz Au/year
• 9 year mine life
• 10 oz/yd3
• 15 ft. pay sections
• Formed by Alaska Range uplift
causing southward stream
migration
• Seismic survey and drilling
discovered channel at 165 ft.
40Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Alluvial Fan
•Aggradational placer - depositing
high-grade pay into thick section of
low-grade pay (100 ft. +)
•Patchwork of lenses and highly
erratic local concentrations  Bulk
•Little Squaw, Alaska Canyon, Bench
and Alluvial Fan
• 200,000 oz Au @ 0.02 oz/yd3
• 200 ft. thick but 100 ft. till overburden
41Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Beach Strandline & Marine
• Sorting action of waves, tides, currents and winds concentrating heavies along lines
• Offshore deposits scoured by glaciers, sorted by tides, concentrated in storms and re-worked by
fluvial processes
• NomeCoastal Plain, Alaska AnglogoldAshanti
• Discovered 1899, hand-miners 1-5 oz/day from beach
• 5-6 M oz historical production
• Current resource: .5 - 2.5 M oz @ 0.002 oz/yd3
42Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
43
Marine Offshore - Nome
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Other PlacerTypes
• Desert – wind principal transport & concentration agent although flash flooding
can locally enrich
• Most scams occur in the desert (stay away fromArizona!)
• Glacial – rare economic concentrations
• Unsorted, unstratified, high-clay
• Moraines, tills and shorelines
• Yukon, but nothing significant in Alaska
• CoastalAeolian – sand dune systems
• Richards Bay (ilmenite, rutile, zircon)
44Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
TOP: 20 g gold nugget within 1 tonne gravel  sample #1 = 0 g/t  sample #2 = 40 g/t
UNREPRESENTATIVE
BOTTOM: 20g gold dust within 1 tonne gravel  both sub-samples = 20 g/t
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Heterogeneity and Nugget Effect
47
Proportion of Ore Mineral versus Homogeneity
E= Evaporite; C= Coal; Fe= Bedded Iron Ore; P=Phosphate; B=Bauxite; PbZn=Stratiform lead-zinc;
Ni=Stratiform Ni; SSn=Stratiform tin; PC=Porphyry Copper; VSn=Tin veins; V=Gold, Silver veins; U=Uranium;
D=Diamonds; AD=alluvial diamonds (After Haddon King et al 1980)
High
LowHigh
Low
ProportionofOreMineral
Homogeneity
E
C
Fe
B
P
Ni
SS
n
VS
n
VD
AD
PC
U
Source: King, McMahon & Bujtor CRA
(Australia) 1980
Nuggety
Creeks
Fans,
Terraces
Flood-
plains,
Offshore
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
How DoYou Raise Finance? Ex: Petropavlovsk
Equivalent ‘ore’ grades: 0.1 - 0.18 g/tonne
Disposed assets for $25 M b/c high alluvial cash costs  $1,319/oz
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Exploration Methods - Drilling
49
Banka
Auger
Churn
Hammer & RAB
RC
Double Cased
Hammer
Sonic
Which one do you choose?
• 3in. – 12in. (8in. Minimum in >60 mesh)
• $5/ft - $90/ft
• Penetration rate – gold loss/migration –
recovery -
Boart Longyear Sonic
Mini-Auger
Banka
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Sample Processing - MiniWashplant
50
Goldfields Prospector
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Laboratory
De-mag concentrates, classify Clean, dry and weigh gold (milligrams)
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Mobile Lab
Scale in
mg
Special
clean-up
pans
Bulk Sampling – Pilot Production
Representative samples (1 to 5,000 m3)
Detailed geology, stratigraphy, mineralogy
Simple model
PSD
Optimize
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Channel – Gulch Section
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Alluvial Fan Section
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Methods
Equipment
Washplants
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Underground Placer Mining – 1900s Fairbanks
Thawing Frozen Gravels in
Narrow, High-Grade Paystreaks
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
1. Remove forest & thaw
2. Strip black muck loess
(save for final restoration)
3. Strip overburden gravel
4. Mining paydirt
5. Processing plant - discharging into
settling pond(s)
6. Restored area
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Hydraulicking – 1.5 Billion cubic yards in California
Blue Babe – baby mammoth
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Hydraulicking
John Miscovich - Legend
Intelli-giant – automatic monitor
Baker Family – Mudminers inTofty
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Dragline Mining
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Don’tTangle the Cable on the Spool!
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Skyline-Drag System, Nome
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Bucket-Ladder Dredge
Over 100 in AK
Continuous,
high volume
Mercury, then
trapezoidal jigs
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Problems:
Water
Climate
Davidson Ditch – 90 mile pipeline (1920)
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Steam Fields – ColdWater Saved Alaska
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
TheTweet Dredge +110Years Operation
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Bima Dredge, Nome
1987 – 1990
World’s largest dredge
Marine deposits
118,000 ounces
Built for MalaysianTin
Failed due to severe
conditions – Arctic
Storms!!!
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Marine Mining: New
Techniques &Technologies
All theTime
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Pomrenke Dredge
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
The Future: Jack-up Barge (from Namibia Al. D.)
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
OtherTechniques
Ross-box
Suction Dredging
Reverse spirals
Hydro-clean
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
New-ZealandType Dredge – A Model Mine
1. Strip topsoil
2. Push overburden
3. Basic equipment:
1. 40t ext x 2
2. D6 dozer or 920
FEL & 40t truck
4. 2-man operation
1. Backhoe Feed
2. Ancillary (Tails,
Strip, Fuel, etc.)
5. Convey tails
6. Place overburden
7. Reclaim topsoil
8. Natural revegetation
< 2 years
9. Farmland restored!
Floating Washplant
Fed from Land
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
N.L.Wimmler (1927) – Review of Placer Mining
Methods and Costs
Few Good Miners
Time for a Revision!
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Tools of theTrade – Basic Equipment
D11 – 11 tonne push
FEL versatility
40 t Excavator
‘backhoe’
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Derocker
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Home-made trammel with hopper, punch plant,
forklift/truck tires & sluice boxes
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Double-deck screen
Coarse rock conveyor
Even feed distribution to sluices
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Sluice Box Riffles
Expanded Metal – Fine Au
Angle Iron – Coarse Au
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Miners Moss – 3M Nomad Carpetting
Ground-breaking Sluice & Riffle Design
85
RandyClarkson
• Riffle Spacing
• Feed Rates
• Riffle Types (Angle
Iron, Flat Bar,
Expanded Metal)
• Matting
• Oscillation
• Hydraulic Riffles
• Punch-Plate
• Triple-Run Box
• Pre-Screening
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
GoldWheels -Toy
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Jigs, Centrifuges, Bowls &Tables
88
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Transporting Gold
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Advice
1. Maintenance, Maintenance, Maintenance!
2. Do Not Fire Assay Placer Gold
3. Washplant Design – K.I.S.S.
4. Coarse Gold ≠ Fine Gold
5. Sampling Evidence and Production History
90Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Barry Clay with the 294oz
Centennial Nugget found
whilst on his dozer!!!
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Concurrent
Reclamation
Best Practice
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
2014 Indictment at Platinum Creek Mine
I blame the Aussies
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Closure & Marketing
• Turbidity – Settling Ponds Required!
• Keep it Safe & Stable –Wetlands & Moose Pasture
• Mercury unnecessary; retort  Green Gold, Ethical Jewelry
• Heritage &Tourism
• Nugget prices 3x for jewelery
94
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
Resources – thank you
Websites
• Alaska Gold Forum
http://bb.bbboy.net/alaskagoldforum
• AMDS Prospecting Forum
http://www.akmining.biz/forums/forum.html
• ICMJ Prospecting & Mining Journal Forum
http://forum.icmj.com/
• Canadian Prospector’s Forum
http://gpex.ca/smf/index.php
• World Placer Journal http://www.mine.mn/
• New 49’ers Forum http://www.goldgold.com/
Books
• Wells, John. Placer Examination
• MacDonald, Eoin. Alluvial Mining
• IMM. Alluvial Mining Conference Proceedings
1990
• M.I.R.L. Reports & Alaska Placer Conference
Proceedings
95
A Great Read – A Mining Legend
Gold in Cornwall (Simon Camm)
University of Leeds Placer Mineral Group (Rob Chapman): http://see-web-01.leeds.ac.uk/misc/miner/97
99
101
Pandora’s Inn
Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim

Placer gold mining in alaska

  • 1.
  • 2.
    Background – ASM& Placers Prospecting Exploration & Development Mining Reclamation & Marketing
  • 3.
    200 Pans =1 cubic metre 1 cubic metre = 2 tonnes 1 gram Au = $50 US 10 flyspecks = 1 milligram (dust) 1 A colour = 1 – 2 milligrams (ball point pen) There are no B or C colours, and no nuggets > 1 cent < $1
  • 4.
    150 episodes over5 seasons 5-10 minutes education - 30 minutes drama Yukon miners better
  • 5.
  • 6.
    Golden History: Beauty, Power,Value PeruvianChacras -“gold farms” Las Medulas in Northern Spain, mined 25 a.d.
  • 7.
    Serra Pelada, Brazil1980s 7 Stereotypes of ASM (Artisanal & Small- scale Mining)
  • 8.
  • 9.
    Artisanal & Small-ScaleMining Bigger industry than you may think: • 20,000,000 directly employed 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 ASM Share (%) of Global Mineral Production (ICMM 2012) 3TG “Conflict minerals” 2005 Artisanal Gold Production (Tonnes) Columbia 21.6 Mexico 7.4 Ghana 6.9 Brazil 6.1 Tanzania 5.0 Bolivia 3.5 Papua New Guinea 3.2 Rural development, alternative livelihoods & ‘green gold’
  • 10.
  • 12.
    Green, FairTrade Gold Artisanalcertified ethical standard (ARM) Social & Environmental standards $ Premium Small mining is beautiful – MarcelloVeiga, UBC Professor
  • 13.
    Placer Economics Commodity QuantityPrice ($ US) Value ($ US Million)Note Alluvial Gold 6,300,000 ounces 1,250per ounce $ 7,875 7% of 90 Moz Hard Rock Total (mod from USGS, WGC etc) Titanium 2,400,000 tonnes 900per tonne $ 2,160 High grade TiO2/FeTiO3 feed (mod from Credit Suisse) Zircon 1,200,000 tonnes 1,100per tonne $ 1,320 Diamonds 13,200,000 carats 300per carat $ 3,960 12% of 110 Mct gem (mod. From Bain) Tin 100,000 tonnes 25,000per tonne $ 2,500 40% of 250kt est. (mod from ITRI) $ 17,815 Also: REEs, critical metals (tungsten,coltan)
  • 14.
    Significant Market &Good Prices 333 137 111 26 17 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 Iron Gold Copper Silver Potash Nickel Phosphate Zinc PGMs Diamonds Others Value of Global Metal Production 2011 ($ US Billion) Source: ICMM 2012
  • 15.
    Rafal Swiecki (http://www.minelinks.com/)15 19th Century Gold Rushes
  • 16.
    Rafal Swiecki (http://www.minelinks.com/)16 20th/21st Century Gold Rushes
  • 17.
    Fairbanks, 8 Moz Nome,6 Moz 14 mining regions 67 mining districts Over 25 Moz historic
  • 18.
    2014 est. 230 mines 140operate 70,000 oz
  • 19.
    Gold is whereYOUfind it Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 20.
    Portable sluice box Panthe Creek HistoricWorkings? Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 21.
    Prospect Explore &Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 22.
    Hand-stacked cobbles –YES!High-grade potential Historic cut-off grade for hand working - ground sluicing 1 opcy Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 23.
    Paystreak Areas Flood Gold FalseBedrock & Paleochannels Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 24.
    Prospect Explore &Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 25.
    Prospect Explore &Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 26.
    Geophysics? Unlikely… Ground Magnetometer– variable success, lots of false positives. Metal detecting is a hobby. Seismic – successful in simple, homogenous conditions (Valdez Creek 460,000 ounces placer gold) but can be expensive, complex Ground Penetrating Radar – Same, but less success LIDAR – Useful in characterizing geomorphology and locating features (channels, terraces, historic workings) but too expensive. Satellite imagery good enough. Drilling must be done anyway, so most operators don’t bother with the distraction, complexity, risk, and high costs.Cheap methods needed. Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 27.
    Geochemistry & Geomorphology Again– not much use yet… Geochemistry Defining gold signatures, lode mineralization types, spatial and temporal evolution  Identify hard-rock lode sources Geomorphology & Grain Morphology Morphology: Particle Size & Shape = Distance Magadan success  Arc GIS today? Flume tank modelling to understand deposition Improve knowledge of geological controls, better models WhiteChannel Gravels inYukon Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 28.
  • 29.
    Portable Highbanker Up to1 m3 samples 1.5” Pump Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 30.
    Prospect Explore &Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 31.
    Pan Color Count Color Category Abbreviati on Mass(mg) Description Micro- flyspeck Mf 0.03 (30 = 1 mg) Cannot see 30cm away, must squint close-up; fine dust; flat and flaky Flyspeck F 0.1 (10 = 1mg) Specks visible 30cm away; flat or flaky A Colour A 1-2 ~1mm diameter, ball-point pen sized B Colour B 2-5 Up to ~2mm, elongate or spherical in 3 dimensions C Colour C 5-25 Up to 3mm, smaller than pea grain, clunk sound Nugget Nug +25, weigh individually Heft in hand 31 Estimating Particle Mass Using Size Classification Blue is Best Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 32.
    Grades and Resources •Measured in volume not tonnage • Square ft. of bedrock • LOW GRADE: • 0.3 g/m3……………0.01 oz/yd (equivalent to 0.1 – 0.2 gpt ore) • $10 per yard • Fineness (850? 950? 700?) • Cut-off pan: 2 mg • 20 flyspecks, or: • 1 – 2 ‘A’ colours, or: • 1 ‘B’ colour, or: • 60 micro-flyspecks • 500 – 500,000 ounces • 10,000 – 100,000 oz • Depth? • How much overburden-muck? • 0 – 200 feet, 1000 ft.??? • Frozen or thawed? • Multiple paystreaks? • Old workings? • Clay? Boulders? • Fine grained or nugget, flat or round grains? Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 33.
    Camm 1988 Prospect Explore& Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 34.
    Placer Deposit Classification Traditionalclassification based on environmental process nearest lode source: • Eluvial & Coluvial • Fluvial, Bench &Terrace • Buried Channels • Alluvial Fan, Floodplains • Beach Strandline & Marine • Rare: Desert, Glacial, Coastal Aeolian Russian Classification: Gradient-Geomorphological & Aggradational-Degradational (energy systems)  + 25 depositional categories 34Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 35.
    Eluvial • Weathering/Leaching in-situon hill slopes and outcrops • Rain, wind, percolating waters, heat, chemical and biological degradation • Upgrading through removal of soluble minerals or sheet flow Colluvial • Located at base of hill slopes • Downslope movement of weathered rock, wind, rain, freeze-frost action • Poorly sorted and erratic grade and size distribution • Rarely economic • Mkuvia placers in SouthernTanzania? Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 36.
    Fluvial, Bench &Terrace:Stream Placers Classic, most common, and most important River, stream, creek, gulch and relicts (bench or terrace) Lighter particles winnowed away while heavy minerals concentrate on bedrock, or • inside bends and areas of lower velocity-pressure -gradient • Crevices, boulders and other natural traps Slatey, vertical bedrock good; rough & irregular good. Usually formed within few kilometers of source rock • Grain morphology and inclusions to relate placer to lode (R. Chapman, Mortenson, etc.) With distance, particle sizes reduce and sorting improves, UNLESS it is re-worked, glaciated, or disturbed 36Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 37.
    Prospect Explore &Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 38.
    Prospect Explore &Develop Mining Reclaim Typical Profile
  • 39.
    Waterfalls…Rarely Gold Rush ‘GloryHole’ Fail Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 40.
    Deep, Buried Channels •Can be High Grade!!! • Valdez Creek, Alaska 1981 • Most productive in N.America • 100,000 oz Au/year • 9 year mine life • 10 oz/yd3 • 15 ft. pay sections • Formed by Alaska Range uplift causing southward stream migration • Seismic survey and drilling discovered channel at 165 ft. 40Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 41.
    Alluvial Fan •Aggradational placer- depositing high-grade pay into thick section of low-grade pay (100 ft. +) •Patchwork of lenses and highly erratic local concentrations  Bulk •Little Squaw, Alaska Canyon, Bench and Alluvial Fan • 200,000 oz Au @ 0.02 oz/yd3 • 200 ft. thick but 100 ft. till overburden 41Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 42.
    Beach Strandline &Marine • Sorting action of waves, tides, currents and winds concentrating heavies along lines • Offshore deposits scoured by glaciers, sorted by tides, concentrated in storms and re-worked by fluvial processes • NomeCoastal Plain, Alaska AnglogoldAshanti • Discovered 1899, hand-miners 1-5 oz/day from beach • 5-6 M oz historical production • Current resource: .5 - 2.5 M oz @ 0.002 oz/yd3 42Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 43.
    43 Marine Offshore -Nome Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 44.
    Other PlacerTypes • Desert– wind principal transport & concentration agent although flash flooding can locally enrich • Most scams occur in the desert (stay away fromArizona!) • Glacial – rare economic concentrations • Unsorted, unstratified, high-clay • Moraines, tills and shorelines • Yukon, but nothing significant in Alaska • CoastalAeolian – sand dune systems • Richards Bay (ilmenite, rutile, zircon) 44Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 45.
    Prospect Explore &Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 46.
    TOP: 20 ggold nugget within 1 tonne gravel  sample #1 = 0 g/t  sample #2 = 40 g/t UNREPRESENTATIVE BOTTOM: 20g gold dust within 1 tonne gravel  both sub-samples = 20 g/t Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 47.
    Heterogeneity and NuggetEffect 47 Proportion of Ore Mineral versus Homogeneity E= Evaporite; C= Coal; Fe= Bedded Iron Ore; P=Phosphate; B=Bauxite; PbZn=Stratiform lead-zinc; Ni=Stratiform Ni; SSn=Stratiform tin; PC=Porphyry Copper; VSn=Tin veins; V=Gold, Silver veins; U=Uranium; D=Diamonds; AD=alluvial diamonds (After Haddon King et al 1980) High LowHigh Low ProportionofOreMineral Homogeneity E C Fe B P Ni SS n VS n VD AD PC U Source: King, McMahon & Bujtor CRA (Australia) 1980 Nuggety Creeks Fans, Terraces Flood- plains, Offshore Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 48.
    How DoYou RaiseFinance? Ex: Petropavlovsk Equivalent ‘ore’ grades: 0.1 - 0.18 g/tonne Disposed assets for $25 M b/c high alluvial cash costs  $1,319/oz Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 49.
    Exploration Methods -Drilling 49 Banka Auger Churn Hammer & RAB RC Double Cased Hammer Sonic Which one do you choose? • 3in. – 12in. (8in. Minimum in >60 mesh) • $5/ft - $90/ft • Penetration rate – gold loss/migration – recovery - Boart Longyear Sonic Mini-Auger Banka Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 50.
    Sample Processing -MiniWashplant 50 Goldfields Prospector Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 51.
    Prospect Explore &Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 52.
    Laboratory De-mag concentrates, classifyClean, dry and weigh gold (milligrams) Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 53.
    Prospect Explore &Develop Mining Reclaim Mobile Lab Scale in mg Special clean-up pans
  • 54.
    Bulk Sampling –Pilot Production Representative samples (1 to 5,000 m3) Detailed geology, stratigraphy, mineralogy Simple model PSD Optimize Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 55.
    Prospect Explore &Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 56.
    Prospect Explore &Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 57.
    Channel – GulchSection Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 58.
    Alluvial Fan Section ProspectExplore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 59.
  • 60.
    Underground Placer Mining– 1900s Fairbanks Thawing Frozen Gravels in Narrow, High-Grade Paystreaks Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 61.
    1. Remove forest& thaw 2. Strip black muck loess (save for final restoration) 3. Strip overburden gravel 4. Mining paydirt 5. Processing plant - discharging into settling pond(s) 6. Restored area Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 62.
    Prospect Explore &Develop Mining Reclaim Hydraulicking – 1.5 Billion cubic yards in California Blue Babe – baby mammoth
  • 63.
    Prospect Explore &Develop Mining Reclaim Hydraulicking John Miscovich - Legend Intelli-giant – automatic monitor
  • 64.
    Baker Family –Mudminers inTofty Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 65.
    Dragline Mining Prospect Explore& Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 66.
    Don’tTangle the Cableon the Spool! Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 67.
    Skyline-Drag System, Nome ProspectExplore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 68.
    Bucket-Ladder Dredge Over 100in AK Continuous, high volume Mercury, then trapezoidal jigs Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim Problems: Water Climate
  • 69.
    Davidson Ditch –90 mile pipeline (1920) Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 70.
    Steam Fields –ColdWater Saved Alaska Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 71.
    TheTweet Dredge +110YearsOperation Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 72.
    Bima Dredge, Nome 1987– 1990 World’s largest dredge Marine deposits 118,000 ounces Built for MalaysianTin Failed due to severe conditions – Arctic Storms!!! Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 73.
    Marine Mining: New Techniques&Technologies All theTime Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 74.
    Pomrenke Dredge Prospect Explore& Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 75.
    The Future: Jack-upBarge (from Namibia Al. D.) Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 76.
  • 77.
    New-ZealandType Dredge –A Model Mine 1. Strip topsoil 2. Push overburden 3. Basic equipment: 1. 40t ext x 2 2. D6 dozer or 920 FEL & 40t truck 4. 2-man operation 1. Backhoe Feed 2. Ancillary (Tails, Strip, Fuel, etc.) 5. Convey tails 6. Place overburden 7. Reclaim topsoil 8. Natural revegetation < 2 years 9. Farmland restored! Floating Washplant Fed from Land Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 78.
    N.L.Wimmler (1927) –Review of Placer Mining Methods and Costs Few Good Miners Time for a Revision! Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 79.
    Tools of theTrade– Basic Equipment D11 – 11 tonne push FEL versatility 40 t Excavator ‘backhoe’ Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 80.
    Derocker Prospect Explore &Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 81.
    Home-made trammel withhopper, punch plant, forklift/truck tires & sluice boxes Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 82.
    Double-deck screen Coarse rockconveyor Even feed distribution to sluices Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 83.
    Prospect Explore &Develop Mining Reclaim Sluice Box Riffles Expanded Metal – Fine Au Angle Iron – Coarse Au
  • 84.
    Prospect Explore &Develop Mining Reclaim Miners Moss – 3M Nomad Carpetting
  • 85.
    Ground-breaking Sluice &Riffle Design 85 RandyClarkson • Riffle Spacing • Feed Rates • Riffle Types (Angle Iron, Flat Bar, Expanded Metal) • Matting • Oscillation • Hydraulic Riffles • Punch-Plate • Triple-Run Box • Pre-Screening Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 86.
    GoldWheels -Toy Prospect Explore& Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 87.
    Prospect Explore &Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 88.
    Jigs, Centrifuges, Bowls&Tables 88 Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 89.
    Transporting Gold Prospect Explore& Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 90.
    Advice 1. Maintenance, Maintenance,Maintenance! 2. Do Not Fire Assay Placer Gold 3. Washplant Design – K.I.S.S. 4. Coarse Gold ≠ Fine Gold 5. Sampling Evidence and Production History 90Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim Barry Clay with the 294oz Centennial Nugget found whilst on his dozer!!!
  • 91.
    Prospect Explore &Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 92.
  • 93.
    2014 Indictment atPlatinum Creek Mine I blame the Aussies Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 94.
    Closure & Marketing •Turbidity – Settling Ponds Required! • Keep it Safe & Stable –Wetlands & Moose Pasture • Mercury unnecessary; retort  Green Gold, Ethical Jewelry • Heritage &Tourism • Nugget prices 3x for jewelery 94 Prospect Explore & Develop Mining Reclaim
  • 95.
    Resources – thankyou Websites • Alaska Gold Forum http://bb.bbboy.net/alaskagoldforum • AMDS Prospecting Forum http://www.akmining.biz/forums/forum.html • ICMJ Prospecting & Mining Journal Forum http://forum.icmj.com/ • Canadian Prospector’s Forum http://gpex.ca/smf/index.php • World Placer Journal http://www.mine.mn/ • New 49’ers Forum http://www.goldgold.com/ Books • Wells, John. Placer Examination • MacDonald, Eoin. Alluvial Mining • IMM. Alluvial Mining Conference Proceedings 1990 • M.I.R.L. Reports & Alaska Placer Conference Proceedings 95 A Great Read – A Mining Legend
  • 96.
    Gold in Cornwall(Simon Camm)
  • 97.
    University of LeedsPlacer Mineral Group (Rob Chapman): http://see-web-01.leeds.ac.uk/misc/miner/97
  • 99.
  • 101.
    101 Pandora’s Inn Prospect Explore& Develop Mining Reclaim