Chemosphere | 2019

Long-term monitoring of waste-rock weathering at the Antamina mine, Peru.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


The weathering of mine waste rock can cause release of metal-laden and acidic drainage that requires long-term and costly environmental management. To identify and quantify the geochemical processes and physical transport mechanisms controlling drainage quality, we monitored the weathering of five large-scale (20,000\u202ft) instrumented waste-rock piles of variable and mixed-composition at the Antamina mine, Peru, in a decade-long monitoring program. Fine-grained, sulfidic waste rock with low-carbonate content exhibited high sulfide oxidation rates (>1\u202fg\u202fS kg-1 waste rock yr-1) and within 7 years produced acidic (pH\u202f<\u202f3) drainage with high Cu and Zn concentrations in the g L-1 range. In contrast, drainage from coarse, carbonate-rich waste rock remained neutral for >10 years and had significantly lower metal loads. Efficient metal retention (>99%) caused by sorption and secondary mineral formation of e.g., gypsum, Fe-(oxy)hydroxides, and Cu/Zn-hydroxysulfates enforced strong (temporary) controls on drainage quality. Furthermore, reactive waste-rock fractions, as small as 10% of total mass, dominated the overall drainage chemistry from the waste-rock piles through internal mixing. This study demonstrates that a reliable prediction of the timing and quality of waste-rock drainage on practice-relevant spatiotemporal scales requires a quantitative understanding of the prevailing in-situ porewater conditions, secondary mineralogy, and spatial distribution of reactive waste-rock fractions in composite piles.

Volume 215
Pages \n 858-869\n
DOI 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2018.10.105
Language English
Journal Chemosphere

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