The mining and processing of gold involves several stages, from exploration to refining. Here’s a detailed breakdown:
—
1. Exploration
Before mining begins, geologists identify potential gold deposits using:
- Geological surveys (satellite imagery, mapping)
- Geochemical sampling (soil and rock analysis)
- Drilling (core samples to confirm gold presence)
- Open-Pit Mining: Large-scale excavation of ore near the surface.
- Placer Mining: Extracts gold from loose sediments (rivers, beaches).
- Shaft Mining: Vertical tunnels access ore veins.
- Drift Mining: Horizontal tunnels follow gold seams.
- Example: Mponeng Mine (South Africa), deepest gold mine (~4 km).
- Ore is crushed into smaller pieces (jaw/cone crushers).
- Further ground into fine powder (ball mills) to liberate gold particles.
- Miller Process: Chlorine gas removes impurities (~99.5% pure).
- Wohlwill Process: Electrolysis achieves 99.99% purity (“four nines”).
- Cyanide spills can contaminate water supplies.
- Mercury poisoning affects artisanal miners.
- Modern mines must reclaim land post-mining.
—
2. Mining Methods
Gold is extracted using different techniques depending on deposit depth and geology:
A. Surface Mining
– Used when gold is dispersed in low concentrations.
– Example: Super Pit (Australia), Grasberg (Indonesia).
– Methods: Panning, sluicing, dredging.
– Common in historic gold rushes (e.g., California, Yukon).
B. Underground Mining
Used for deep, high-grade deposits:
—
3. Processing Gold Ore
Extracted ore undergoes several steps to isolate gold:
A. Crushing & Grinding
B. Concentration
Separates gold from waste rock:
1. Gravity Separation: Uses density differences (e.g., shaking tables).
2. Froth Flotation: Chemicals make gold particles cling to bubbles.
C. Extraction
Two primary methods:
1. Cyanidation (Most Common):
– Ore is mixed with a dilute cyanide solution (~0.05% NaCN).
– Gold dissolves into a liquid (leaching).
– Activated carbon absorbs dissolved gold (CIP/CIL process).
2. Mercury Amalgamation (Outdated/Restricted):
– Mercury binds with gold to form an amalgam.
– Health/environmental risks lead to bans in many countries.
D. Refining
Purifies raw gold (~90% pure) to >99% purity:

—
4. Environmental & Safety Concerns
.jpg)
—
Key Takeaways:
✔ Gold mining involves exploration, extraction, and refining stages.
✔ Cyanidation dominates large-scale processing.
✔ Refining produces investment-grade bullion (>99% pure).
✔ Sustainable practices are critical due to environmental risks.
Would you like details on specific technologies or regional mining practices?





Leave a Reply