Mining
Mining is the extraction of valuable minerals from the ground, usually from an ore body or vein.
History
The first mining operation on Earth may have been the turquoise mine operated by the ancient Egyptians at Wady Maghareh on the Sinai Peninsula. Turquoise was also mined in pre-Columbian America in the Cerillos Mining District in New Mexico where a mass of rock 200 feet in depth and 300 feet in width was removed with stone tools; the mine dump covers 20 acres.
Mining techniques
Bioleaching is the application of naturally available bacteria to extract metals from their ore.
See also: Coal mining
Materials commonly recovered by mining
- bauxite (for aluminum)
- coal,
- copper,
- diamonds,
- iron (from the ores haematite and limonite),
- gold,
- lead,
- manganese,
- magnesium,
- nickel,
- platinum,
- salt,
- silver,
- tin,
- titanium,
- uranium,
- zinc.
Further reading
- Hardrock Gold: A Miner's Tale, Tom Morrison, illustrated by Cherry Hunter, University of Oklahoma Press, 1992, hardcover, ISBN 0806124423
Referenced By
Arthur Scargill | Bituminous coal | Black sand | Clausthal-Zellerfeld | Earth Sciences | Earth Sciences basic topics | Earth science | Ecodefense | Eusebius of Caesarea | Ghost town | Guar gum | ISO 3166-1:NA | ISO 3166-1:SZ | Khazad-dum | Khazad-dûm | List of company name etymologies | McDermitt, Nevada | McDermitt, Oregon | Middle Earth/Moria | Mines of Moria | Moria (Middle-earth) | Namibia | Northern Ontario | October 2003 | Pah-Peh-Rheo | Placer deposit | Republic of Namibia | South West Africa | Summitville mine | Swaziland | Telluride, Colorado
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