• Title of article

    Consolidation and incipient oxidation of alkaline arsenopyrite-bearing mine tailings, Macraes Mine, New Zealand

  • Author/Authors

    D Craw، نويسنده , , D Chappell، نويسنده , , M Nelson، نويسنده , , M Walrond، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
  • Pages
    14
  • From page
    485
  • To page
    498
  • Abstract
    Fine grained (ca. 15 μm), arsenopyrite-bearing mine tailings have been exposed to drying and oxidation for 4 a pending relocation. The tailings are still partly covered by a pond of decanted pore waters. The water table in drying tailings has lowered by 1–3 m and desiccation cracks up to 2 cm wide have formed on the 1 m scale, extending through the unsaturated zone. Tailings in the unsaturated zone have similar pore water contents to saturated tailings: typically 16–32 wt% water. Saturated tailings retain alkaline pH (ca. 10) from the mine cyanidation plant, but pH lowers progressively towards ca. 7 near the surface, or near desiccation cracks, in the unsaturated zone. The redox state of the tailings changes in parallel with pH, with an empirical relationship: Eh(mV)=−55 pH+290. Water in the remnant decant pond reflects this relationship also. Unsaturated tailings have variable but low permeabilities, typically 10−3 to 10−4 m/day, and more permeable horizons have allowed incursion of oxygenated air and/or rain water from desiccation cracks. Sulphide grains in all tailings examined are unaltered. Sulphides and solutions in the tailings are out of thermodynamic equilibrium predicted from the redox–pH conditions, due to kinetic constraints. Incursion of rain water locally facilitates deposition from pore waters of insoluble Fe oxide and arsenate minerals, thus fixing As in the dry unsaturated tailings.
  • Journal title
    Applied Geochemistry
  • Serial Year
    1999
  • Journal title
    Applied Geochemistry
  • Record number

    739728