Methods to reduce mercury pollution in small gold mining operations

Authors

  • F. Pantoja-Timarán Corporación Autónoma Regional de Nariño (CORPONARIÑO
  • R. Álvarez-Rodríguez Departamento de Ingeniería de Materiales. ETSI Minas. Universidad Politécnica de Madrid (UPM
  • A. S. Rodríguez-Avelló Departamento de Ingeniería de Materiales. ETSI Minas. Universidad Politécnica de Madrid (UPM

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3989/revmetalm.2005.v41.i3.205

Keywords:

Gold, mercury, amalgamation, pollution, preconcentration

Abstract


The use of mercury for gold beneficiation is still a current practice in small mining operations, mainly in underdeveloped countries, due to the low investment required and necessity of easy to operate systems. But the lack of basic protections makes unavoidable the high pollution of water streams, soils, and in fact, human bodies. Some improvements have been done at site like that related to the removal of the mercury from the amalgam, that usually was done in the open air and now have been changed to the utilization of artisan iron retorts which considerably reduce the emissions of mercury vapors to the atmosphere, but there are still high losses of mercury into the waste solids or tailings coming from the amalgamation process (nearly most of the total weight of the ore treated). In order to reduce the mercury losses into the tailings from the process, this research work has been based in the use of cheap systems, available to the isolated miners, to proof that it is feasible to get an important reduction of the losses and the pollution. The procedure has been accomplished by means of washing the ores with alkaline or detergent agents, together with the use of activated mercury purified by electrowinning in a simple device, easily manufactured in site by the own workers. It is also proven herewith that controlling the time of amalgamation and the total amount of mercury used could reduce the total pollution, and in addition, the gold recovery would be improved. This investigation reports the possibility of a reduction of mercury losses down to 2.4 g per 100 g of gold produced (case of rich ores like La Bruja), with gold recovery up to 94 %; and 8,6 g per 100 g of gold produced (from ores with average grades like La Gruesa), and gold recoveries in the range of 92 %. All that is about 20 to 100 times lower than data reported in current bibliography. The introduction of a previous step of the ore concentration in shaking tables, decreases the total amount of solids for the process of amalgamation in the range of 70 %, then reducing the contaminated solid waste. By doing so the recovery of gold is improved in the case of rich ore, but not with the ore of lower grade when comparing with direct amalgamation. In that case it would be required a combination of shaking tables and flotation of the gravity tailings, but that process is more expensive and complicated for the small miners. The described method involves a low capital investment in equipment, and the training to operate the system is not difficult.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2005-06-30

How to Cite

Pantoja-Timarán, F., Álvarez-Rodríguez, R., & Rodríguez-Avelló, A. S. (2005). Methods to reduce mercury pollution in small gold mining operations. Revista De Metalurgia, 41(3), 194–203. https://doi.org/10.3989/revmetalm.2005.v41.i3.205

Issue

Section

Articles