Dictionary Definition
miner n : laborer who works in a mine [syn:
mineworker]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- A person who works in a mine.
- An operator of mines and other explosives in an army.
Derived terms
Related terms
Translations
a person who works in a mine
- Hungarian: bányász
- Russian: шахтёр
an operator of mines and other explosives in an
army
- Hungarian: aknász
- Russian: сапёр
- ttbc Chinese: 礦工 / 矿工 kuànggōng
- ttbc Dutch: mijnwerker
- ttbc Estonian: kaevur
- ttbc French: mineur
- ttbc German: Bergmann , Bergarbeiter
- ttbc Hebrew: כורה
- ttbc Italian: minatore
- ttbc Japanese: 坑夫 (こうふ kōfu)
- ttbc Korean: 광부 (鑛夫 gwangbu)
- ttbc Polish: górnik
- ttbc Spanish: minero
- ttbc Swedish: gruvarbetare
Swedish
Noun
miner- indefinite plural of min (facial expression)
Extensive Definition
Mining is the extraction of valuable
minerals or other
geological materials
from the earth, usually (but not always) from an ore body, vein or
(coal) seam. Materials recovered by mining include bauxite, coal, copper, gold, silver, diamonds, iron, precious
metals, lead, limestone, magnesite, nickel, phosphate, oil shale,
rock
salt, tin, uranium and molybdenum. Any material that
cannot be grown from agricultural processes, or
created artificially
in a laboratory or
factory, is usually
mined. Mining in a wider sense comprises extraction of any non-renewable
resource (e.g., petroleum, natural gas,
or even water).
History
Since the beginning of civilization people have used stone, ceramics and, later, metals found on or close to the Earth's surface. These were used to manufacture early tools and weapons. For example, high quality flint found in northern France and southern England were used to set fire and break rock. Flint mines have been found in chalk areas where seams of the stone were followed underground by shafts and galleries. The mines at Grimes Graves are especially famous, and like most other flint mines, are Neolithic in origin (ca 4000 BC-ca 3000 BC). Other hard rocks mined or collected for axes included the greenstone of the Langdale axe industry based in the English Lake District.The oldest known mine on archaeological record is
the "Lion Cave" in Swaziland. At
this site, which by radiocarbon
dating the mine dates around 4,100 BC, paleolithic humans mined
mineral hematite, which
contained iron and was
ground to produce the red pigment ochre. Mines of a similar age in
Hungary and
are believed to be sites where Neanderthals
may have mined flint for
weapons and tools.
Ancient
Egyptians mined malachite at Maadi. At first,
Egyptians
used the bright green malachite stones for ornamentations and
pottery. Later, between 2,613 and 2,494 BC, large building projects
required expeditions abroad to the area of Wadi Maghara in order
"to secure minerals and other resources not available in Egypt
itself." Quarries for turqoise and copper were also found at "Wadi
Hamamat, Tura, Aswan and various other Nubian sites" on the
Sinai
Peninsula and at Timna. Mining in
Egypt occurred in the earliest dynasties, and the gold mines of
Nubia were
among the largest and most extensive of any in Ancient
Egypt, and are described by the Greek author Diodorus
Siculus. He mentions that fire-setting
was one method used to break down the hard rock holding the gold.
One of the complexes is shown in one of earliest known maps. They
crushed the ore and ground it to a fine powder before washing the
powder for the gold
dust.
Europe
Mining in Europe has a very long pedigree, examples including the silver mines of Laurium, which helped the establishment of the Greek city state, especially Athens. However, it is the Romans who developed large scale mining methods, especially the use of large volumes of water brought to the minehead by numerous aqueducts. The water was used for a variety of purposes, and included using it to remove overburden and rock debris, as well as washing comminuted or crushed ores, and driving simple machinery. Spain was one of the most important mining regions, but all regions of the Roman Empire were exploited. They used reverse overshot water-wheels for dewatering their deep mines such as those at Rio Tinto. The Celts, for example, who were native to Britain, had mined minerals for centuries, but when the Romans came, the scale of the operations changed dramatically. The Romans needed what Britain possessed, especially gold, silver, tin and lead. Mining in the Medieval period is best known through the work De Re Metallica (1556) of Georg Agricola, who described many different mining methods then used in German or Saxon mines. Use of water power in the form of water mills was extensive, and were employed in crushing ore, raising ore from shafts and ventilating galleries by giant bellows.Black powder
was first used in mining in Banská
Štiavnica, Kingdom
of Hungary present-day Slovakia in 1627.
In 1762, the world's first mining academy was established in the
same town.
Britain
Britain's gold mines were located in Wales at Dolgellau and Dolaucothi. Romans discovered the Dolaucothi vein after the invasion, in about 74 AD, and a settlement was soon set up in the Cothi Valley protected by a fort. They used hydraulic mining methods on a large scale to prospect for the veins of ore, especially a now redundant form of mining known as hushing. It involved building numerous aqueducts to supply water to the minehead where it was stored in large reservoirs and tanks. When a full tank was opened, the wave of water sluiced away the overburden to expose the bedrock underneath and any gold veins. The rock was attacked by fire-setting to heat the rock, which would then be quenched with a stream of water. The thermal shock cracked the rock, enabling it to be removed, aided by further streams of water from the overhead tanks. They used similar methods to work cassiterite deposits in Cornwall and lead ore in the Pennines. The methods had been developed by the Romans in Spain in 25 AD to exploit large alluvial gold deposits, the largest site being at Las Medulas, where seven long aqueducts were built to tap local rivers and to sluice the deposits. They followed the ore veins underground once opencast mining was no longer feasible. At Dolaucothi they stoped out the veins, and drove adits through barren rock to drain the stopes. Alternatively, the veins may have been trenched, keeping the upper part open to the air. At deeper levels, stoping will have been necessary. The same adits were also used to ventilate the workings, especially important when fire-setting was used. At other parts of the site, they penetrated the water table and dewatered the mines using several kinds of machine, especially reverse overshot water-wheels. They were used extensively in the copper mines at Rio Tinto in Spain, where one sequence comprised 16 such wheels arranged in pairs, and lifting water about . They were worked as treadmills with miners standing on the top slats. Many examples of such devices have been found in old Roman mines and some examples are now preserved in the British Museum and the National Museum of Wales.Lead and silver were widely exploited
during the Roman period, in Wales, the Mendips and
Pennines.
A lead-silver mine at Charterhouse,
Somerset for example, was guarded by a small fort and was next to the mine
workings and settlement for the miners. Lead pigs have been found
at several localities in Britain, and mining was so successful,
that the Spanish complained about over-production depressing the
market. The silver was valuable bullion, while the lead found
numerous applications, especially in roofing and plumbing.
There were many iron mines in Roman
Britain. The index to the Ordnance Survey Map of Roman Britain
lists 33 iron mines: 67% of these are in the Weald and 15% in the
Forest of
Dean. The majority of mine workers were slaves.
The work conditions were poor, and up to 12% of miners died every
year.
North America
In North America there are ancient, prehistoric copper mines along Lake Superior. "Indians availed themselves of this copper starting at least 5000 years ago," and copper tools, arrowheads, and other artifacts that were part of an extensive native trade network have been discovered. In addition, obsidian, flint, and other minerals were mined, worked, and traded. While the early French explorers that encountered the sites made no use of the metals due to the difficulties in transporting it, the copper was eventually traded throughout the continent along major river routes. In Manitoba, Canada, there also are ancient quartz mines near Waddy Lake and surrounding regions.In the early colonial history of the Americas,
"native gold and silver was quickly expropriated and sent back to
Spain in fleets of gold- and silver-laden galleons." Turquoise dated
at 700 A.D. was mined in pre-Columbian
America; in the Cerillos Mining District in New Mexico,
estimates are that "about 15,000 tons of rock had been removed from
Mt Chalchihuitl using stone tools before 1700." Mining in the
United
States became prevalent in the 19th century. As with the
California
Gold Rush in the mid 1800s, mining for minerals and precious
metals alongside ranching was very important in
the Westward
Expansion to the Pacific coast. With the exploration of the
West, mining camps were established and "expressed a distinctive
spirit, an enduring legacy to the new nation;" Gold Rushers would
experience the same problems as the Land Rushers of the transient
West that preceded them. Aided by railroads, many traveled West for
work opportunities in mining. Western cities such as Denver
and Sacramento
originated as mining towns.
Procedure
Steps of process
- Prospecting or Exploration to find and then define the extent and value of ore where it is located ("ore body")
- Conduct resource estimation to mathematically estimate the size and grade of the deposit
- Conduct a pre-feasibility study to determine the theoretical economics of the ore deposit. This identifies, early on, whether further investment in estimation and engineering studies is warranted and identifies key risks and areas for further work.
- Conduct a feasibility study to evaluate the financial viability, technical and financial risks and robustness of the project and make a decision as whether to develop or walk away from a proposed mine project. This includes mine planning to evaluate the economically recoverable portion of the deposit, the metallurgy and ore recoverability, marketability and payability of the ore concentrates, engineering, milling and infrastructure costs, finance and equity requirements and a cradle to grave analysis of the possible mine, from the initial excavation all the way through to reclamation.
- Development to create access to an ore body and building of mine plant and equipment
- The operation of the mine in an active sense
- Reclamation to make land where a mine had been suitable for future use
Techniques
Mining techniques can be divided into two basic excavation types: In-situ leach is a particular mining technique that is used to mine minerals (potash, potassium chloride, sodium chloride, sodium sulfate and uranium oxide) which dissolve in water.Extractive metallurgy
The science of extractive
metallurgy is a specialized area in the science of metallurgy
that studies the extraction of valuable metals and minerals from
their ores, especially through chemical or mechanical means.
Mineral
processing (or mineral dressing) is a specialized area in the
science of metallurgy that studies the mechanical means of
crushing, grinding, and washing that enable the separation
(extractive metallurgy) of valuable metals or minerals from their
gangue (waste
material).
seealso biomineralization
Environmental effects
Environmental issues can include erosion, formation of sinkholes, loss of biodiversity, and contamination of groundwaters and surface water by chemicals from the mining process and products.Modern mining companies in some countries are
required to follow environmental and rehabilitation codes, ensuring
the area mined is returned to close to its original state. In some
countries with pristine environments, such as large parts of
Australia, this
is impossible despite the best intentions. Some mining methods have
devastating environmental and public health effects.
Mining can have adverse effects on surrounding
surface and ground water if protection measures are not exercised.
The result can be unnaturally high concentrations of some chemical
elements, notably arsenic and sulfuric acid, over a significantly
large area of surface or subsurface. Coal mining releases
approximately twenty toxic chemicals, of which 85% is said to be
managed on site. Combined with the effects of water and the new
'channels' created for water to travel through, collect in, and
contact with these chemicals, a situation is created in which
massive contamination can occur. In well-regulated mines,
hydrologists and geologists take careful measures to mitigate any
type of water contamination that could be caused by mines. In
modern American mining, operations must, under federal and state
law, meet standards for protecting surface and ground waters from
contamination, including acid
mine drainage (AMD). To mitigate these problems water is
continuously monitored at coal mines. The five principal
technologies used to control water flow at mine sites are:
diversion systems, containment ponds, groundwater pumping systems,
subsurface drainage systems, and subsurface barriers. In the case
of AMD, contaminated water is generally pumped to a treatment
facility that neutralizes the contaminants.
Some examples of environmental problems
associated with mining operations are:
- Ashio Copper Mine, Ashio, Japan was the site of substantial pollution at end of the nineteenth century
- Acid mine drainage, exemplified by the cases of the Berkeley Lake Mine, and the Wheal Jane Mine
- Dissolution and transport of dissolved metals and heavy metals by run-off and ground waters, an example being the Britannia Mine, a former copper mine near Vancouver, British Columbia. Tar Creek, an abandoned mining area in Picher, Oklahoma that is now an Environmental Protection Agency superfund site. Water in the mine has leaked through into local groundwater, contaminating it with metals such as lead and cadmium.
- Long-term storage of tailings and dust, which can be easily blown off site by wind, an example being Scouriotissa, an abandoned copper mine in Cyprus.
- Erosion of exposed hillsides, mine dumps, tailings dams and resultant siltation of drainages, creeks and rivers, the prime example being the giant Ok Tedi Mine in Papua New Guinea.
- In areas of wilderness mining may cause habitat destruction and destruction or disturbance of ecosystems, and in areas of farming it may disturb or destroy productive grazing and cropping lands. In urbanised environments mining may produce noise pollution, dust pollution and visual pollution.
Although such issues have been associated with
some mining operations in the past, modern mining practices have
improved significantly and are subject to close environmental
scrutiny. Modern mining practises aim to lessen environmental
impacts from mining, and the ultimate aim is to return the local
environment to as close to pristine as is possible. In many cases,
the most significant environmental impact longer-term is visual,
with pits and mine dumps prominent landscape features.
To ensure completion of reclamation (restoring mine
land) most governments and regulatory authorities around the world
require that mining companies post a bond to be held in escrow
until productivity of reclaimed land has been convincingly
demonstrated. Since 1978 the mining industry has reclaimed more
than 2 million acres (8,000 km²) of land in the United States
alone. This reclaimed land has renewed vegetation and wildlife in
previous mining lands and can even be used for farming and
ranching.
For further reading on reclamation of former
mining sites, please see Restoration
ecology.
Mining industry
Overview
While exploration and mining can sometimes be
conducted by individual entrepreneurs or small business, most
modern-day mines are large enterprises requiring large amounts of
capital to establish. Consequently, the mining sector of the
industry is dominated by large, often multinational, mostly
publicly-listed companies. See :Category:Mining
companies for a list. However, what is referred to as the
'mining industry' is actually two sectors, one specializing in
exploration for new resources, the other specializing in mining
those resources. The exploration sector is typically made up of
individuals and small mineral resource companies dependent on
public investment. The mining sector is typically large and
multi-national companies sustained by mineral production from their
mining operations.
Employment
United States
Miners today do more than just dig in the Earth's
subsurface. There are many different jobs, direct and indirect, in
the mining industry, ranging from engineers and lab technicians to
geologists and environmental specialists. Beyond employment
directly linked to mine-site activity, the modern mining industry
also employs many other professionals, including accountants,
lawyers, sales representatives, public relations specialists, not
to mention thousands of men and women involved who manufacture the
machines and equipment necessary to mine minerals.
Employment in the mining industry offers highly
competitive wages and benefits, especially in rural or remote
areas. According to the
Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), wages for coal miners are 30%
higher than the wage earned by the average American. Employees
possessing at least a bachelor's degree in mining or geological
engineering can earn a median pay of over $80,000 annually.
The US Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates that
675,000 are employed in the natural resources and mining sector.
Estimated employment by selected specific commodity (including
mine, mill, smelter, and quarry workers) listed below is from
US Geological
Survey Mineral Commodity Surveys:
- Crushed Stone - 79,700 workers
- Copper - 7,000
- Cement - 18,000
- Sand and Gravel - 38,300
- Gold - 7,600
- Aluminum - 56,000
- Iron Ore - 4,400
- Platinum Group Metals - 1,600
- Salt - 4,100
- Phosphate Rock - 2,900
The mining industry has an experienced but aging
workforce with a mean average age of 50 years and median of 46
years. Indeed, while the industry will require new employees to
meet future demand, the largest dilemma currently facing mine
operators is finding employees to fill vacancies left by a
generation of miners, mine engineers, senior managers, technical
experts and others who are set to retire between 2005 and 2015.
However, the industry is struggling to meet that demand due to
current low enrollment levels in mining education programs at
American colleges and universities.
Mining is regulated under a comprehensive federal
safety law (Federal Mine Safety and Health Act) that is
administered by the Department of Labor's Mine Safety and Health
Administration (MSHA). Currently under federal law, and enforced by
MSHA each U.S. miner must have an approved worker training program
in health and safety issues, including at least 40 hours of basic
safety training for new underground miners with no experience; 24
hours for new miners at surface mines with no experience; plus
eight hours of annual refresher training for all miners.
Safety
United States
Safety has long been a controversial issue in the
mining business especially with sub-surface mining. While mining
today is substantially safer than it was in the previous decades,
mining
accidents are often very high profile, such as the Quecreek
Mine Rescue saving 9 trapped Pennsylvania coal miners in
2002.
Mining ventilation is often seen to be a safety
concern for many miners and their families. Poor ventilation of the
mines causes exposure to harmful gases, heat and dust inside
sub-surface mines. These can cause harmful physiological effects,
even death. The concentration of methane and other airborne
contaminants underground can generally be controlled by dilution
(ventilation), capture before entering the host air stream (methane
drainage), or isolation (seals and stoppings).
Methane gas is a common source of ignition for
explosions in coal mines and can propagate into the more violent
coal
dust explosions. Explosions can be prevented or mitigated by
eliminating ignition sources, minimizing methane concentrations and
coal dust accumulations, generalized rock dusting, and by using
passive and active barriers to suppress propagating
explosions.
Statistical analyses performed by the
U.S. Department of Labor's
Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) show that between
1990 and 2004, the industry cut the rate of injuries (a measure
comparing the rate of incidents to overall number of employees or
hours worked) by more than half and fatalities by two-thirds
following three prior decades of steady improvement.
Machinery
Heavy machinery is needed in mining for exploration and development, to remove and stockpile overburden, to break and remove rocks of diverse hardness and toughness, and to process the ore as well as for reclamation. Bulldozers, drills, explosives and trucks are important for digging into the land, especially in surface mining.Underground mining, like continuous mining, tends
to be more technologically sophisticated because of the dangers and
expense of subsurface tunneling.
Trams are used to
transport miners, minerals and waste.
Mining machinery manufacturers include Atlas Copco,
Joy
Mining Machinery, Bucyrus
International, Caterpillar,
Komatsu,
Volvo,
Hitachi, Terex, Dresser
Industries, Kawasaki,
Eimco Elecon India Limited, and Liebherr.
Placer
mining is a type of surface mining, usually for gold, tin, and other metals, and gemstones. Ore, typically
unconsolidated gravels (alluvium), is fed into
machinery that may consist of a hopper, shaking screen or trommel which frees the minerals
from the gravels. The target minerals are then concentrated using
sluices or jigs.
Abandoned mines
The number of abandoned mines in the United States remains an unknown, ranging "from the National Park Service's tally of 2,500 on its lands, to the Mineral Policy Center's assessment of 560,000 abandoned mines on public and privately owned lands." Many of these abandoned mines are associated with abandoned neighboring towns often referred to as ghost towns. Experts strongly warn against entering or exploring old or abandoned mines.In the U.S., the estimation is that approximately
25% of the abandoned mine lands (AML) sites pose physical safety
hazards. Old mines are often dangerous and can contain deadly
gases, snakes and other
dangerous animals. Since weather may have eroded the earth/rock
surrounding it, the entrance to an old mine in particular can be
very dangerous. Old mine workings, caves, etc. are commonly
hazardous simply due to the lack of oxygen in the air (a condition
in mines known as blackdamp). Blackdamp is a
deadly killer which provides no warning to any individual or group
of individuals entering such an environment.
Every year, dozens are injured or killed in
recreational accidents on mine property. It is only fair to note,
however, that the majority of the deaths are unrelated to mine
exploration. Drownings in open quarries and ATV accidents on
abandoned mine properties are the main cause of accidental death.
The U.S. Department of Labor notes that since 1999, "more than 200
people have died in recreational accidents at surface and
underground active and abandoned operations across the country."
Due to these circumstances, MSHA (Mine
Safety and Health Administration) launched the "Stay Out – Stay
Alive" campaign, which is a national public awareness campaign
aimed at warning and educating children and adults about the
dangers of exploring and playing on active and abandoned mine
sites.
In the U.S., the Abandoned Mine Land Initiative,
launched by the Western Governor's Association and the
National Mining Association is also an effort focusing on
reporting the number of high-priority AML sites. The initiative
identifies, measures and reports on the progress of current
reclamation cleanup programs on an annual basis. In the Americas
region, the
United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and the Chilean
Copper Commission (COHILCO) co-hosted a workshop to address the
problem of abandoned or "orphaned" mines. Including a
representative from the UN, ten countries were represented from
North, Central and South America with an eleventh participant being
Japan.
Records
- The deepest mine in the world: Savuka Mine
in the North
West Province, South Africa
at 3,774 meters
- East Rand Mine in Boksburg, South Africa briefly held the record at 3,585 meters
- The first mine declared the deepest in the world was TauTona in Carletonville, South Africa at 3,581 meters. Plans exist to extend TauTona to a depth of 3,902 meters by July 2008, which will make it the deepest again.
- The deepest open pit mine in the world: Bingham Canyon Mine in Bingham Canyon, Utah, USA at over 1,200 meters
- The largest and second deepest open pit copper mine in the world: Chuquicamata in Chuquicamata, Chile at 900 meters, 940.600 Tons of fine copper and 17.700 Tons of molybdenum
- The largest underground mine: El Teniente, in Rancagua, Chile, 2400 kilometers of underground drifts, 418.000 Tons of copper yearly
- The deepest mine in Europe: Pyhäsalmi Mine in Pyhäjärvi, Finland at 1,444 meters
- The second deepest mine in Europe: Boulby Mine England at 1,400 meters (shaft depth 1,100 meters)
- Sweden's largest underground mine: Kirunavaara mine in Kiruna, Sweden, 450 kilometers of roads, 40 million tonnes of ore produced yearly, depth 1270 meters.
- The deepest borehole in the world: Kola Superdeep Borehole at 12,262 meters. This, however, is not a matter of mining but rather related to scientific drilling.
See also
References
Citations
Bibliography
- Ali, Saleem H. (2003). Mining, the Environment and Indigenous Development Conflicts. Tucson AZ: University of Arizona Press.
- Bhattacharya Jayanta (2003) Principles of Mine Planning, Allied Publishers, New Delhi, India. 454 pages
- Morrison, Tom (1992) Hardrock Gold: A Miner's Tale (ISBN 0-8061-2442-3)
- Even-Zohar, Chaim (2007) From Mine to Mistress: Corporate Strategies and Government Policies in the International Diamond Industry (ISBN 0953733610)
- Geobacter Project: Gold mines may owe their origins to bacteria (in PDF format)
- Garrett, Dennis [http://alaska-freegold.com: Alaska Placer Mining]
External links
miner in Afrikaans: Mynbou
miner in Asturian: Minería
miner in Breton: Mengleuz
miner in Bulgarian: Минно дело
miner in Catalan: Mineria
miner in Czech: Těžební průmysl
miner in Welsh: Mwynglawdd
miner in German: Bergbau
miner in Modern Greek (1453-):
Μεταλλευτική
miner in Spanish: Minería
miner in Esperanto: Minado
miner in Basque: Meatzaritza
miner in French: Mine (gisement)
miner in Korean: 광업
miner in Croatian: Rudarstvo
miner in Indonesian: Pertambangan
miner in Icelandic: Námavinnsla
miner in Italian: Industria mineraria
miner in Hebrew: כרייה
miner in Luxembourgish: Biergbau
miner in Hungarian: Bányászat
miner in Dutch: Mijnbouw
miner in Japanese: 鉱業
miner in Norwegian: Gruvedrift
miner in Norwegian Nynorsk: Gruvedrift
miner in Polish: Górnictwo
miner in Portuguese: Mineração
miner in Romanian: Minerit
miner in Quechua: Qhuya
miner in Russian: Горное дело
miner in Simple English: Mining
miner in Slovak: Baníctvo
miner in Serbian: Рударство
miner in Finnish: Kaivannaistoiminta
miner in Swedish: Gruvdrift
miner in Thai: การทำเหมืองแร่
miner in Vietnamese: Khai mỏ
miner in Turkish: Madencilik
miner in Ukrainian: Гірнича справа
miner in Chinese: 采矿业