Title: Chapter 15: Minerals and Environment
1Chapter 15 Minerals and Environment
Holden mine (near Lake Chelan), and old Cu and
Gold mine
Big Question Is It Possible To Use Nonrenewable
Resources Sustainably
2Case Studysubstitute Newport Golf Club, Seattle
for example in textbook
NewCastle Golf Club, built on former coal mine
and landfill area See http//www.golf.com/golf/co
urses_travel/coursefinder/course/0,28290,1517440,0
0.html
3The Importance of Minerals toSociety
Some uses for minerals in a typical American home
4Formation of Mineral Deposits
- High concentrations of Earth materials form ore
deposits - The origin and distribution of mineral resources
are related to the history of the biosphere and
the geologic cycle
5Distribution of Mineral Resources
- Earths crust is silica-rich
- The oceans have low concentrations of many
minerals - Mined minerals occur in unusually high
concentrations
6Plate Boundaries
- Some mineral deposits are formed by plate
tectonics - Divergent plate boundaries
- heated water rises through fractured rocks and
leaches metals from them, forming metal sulfides - Convergent plate boundaries
- a combination of heat, pressure, and partial
melting mobilizes metals in molten rocks
7Igneous Processes
Crater of Diamonds State Park near Murfreesboro,
Arkansas, the only active US diamond mine and
open to the public
8Sedimentary Processes
The Buckhorn Gold mine in North Okanogan Co is
one of the few currently active in WA state
9Biological Processes
- Some mineral deposits are formed or altered by
biological processes - The major iron ore deposits are in sedimentary
rocks - Organisms form many kinds of minerals
- calcium in shells and bones
10Weathering Processes
- Weathered insoluble ore deposits may accumulate
in the soil unless removed by erosion - Weathering can improve low-grade ore by secondary
enrichment
11Resources and Reserves
12Use and Availability ofMineral Resources
- Minerals are also classified by use and abundance
- The most-used minerals are not metals
13Mineral Consumption
- A mineral resource can be used in three ways
- Rapid consumption
- Consumption with conservation
- Consumption and conservation with recycling
14U.S. Supply of Minerals
- U.S. use exceeds its own supplies of many
minerals - Importing may be more practical than mining
15Impacts of Mineral Development
Bingham Canyon Cooper Pit, Utah
16Social Impacts
- Large-scale mining brings a rapid influx of
- workers
- Adverse social impacts occur when mines
- close down
- Greater environmental regulation of the industry
equal greater costs - Wars are often funded by minerals
17- Generation of waste is a major issue
- Minimizing environmental effects of mineral
development - Regulate the environment at the federal, state,
and local levels - On-site and off-site treatment of waste
- Reduce, reuse, recycle
18Minimizing EnvironmentalImpacts of Mineral
Development
19Recycling
UW recycling video http//www.youtube.com/watch?v
kWMPNiEzAkw
20Minerals and Sustainability
- Simultaneously exploiting and sustaining mineral
resources is problematic - Human ingenuity is important
- How long does it take to develop new approaches?