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Chapter 15: Minerals and Environment

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... Diamonds State Park near Murfreesboro, Arkansas, the only active US diamond mine ... calcium in shells and bones. Weathering Processes ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 15: Minerals and Environment


1
Chapter 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
2
Case 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
3
The Importance of Minerals toSociety
Some uses for minerals in a typical American home
4
Formation 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

5
Distribution of Mineral Resources
  • Earths crust is silica-rich
  • The oceans have low concentrations of many
    minerals
  • Mined minerals occur in unusually high
    concentrations

6
Plate 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

7
Igneous Processes
Crater of Diamonds State Park near Murfreesboro,
Arkansas, the only active US diamond mine and
open to the public
8
Sedimentary Processes
The Buckhorn Gold mine in North Okanogan Co is
one of the few currently active in WA state
9
Biological 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

10
Weathering Processes
  • Weathered insoluble ore deposits may accumulate
    in the soil unless removed by erosion
  • Weathering can improve low-grade ore by secondary
    enrichment

11
Resources and Reserves
12
Use and Availability ofMineral Resources
  • Minerals are also classified by use and abundance
  • The most-used minerals are not metals

13
Mineral Consumption
  • A mineral resource can be used in three ways
  • Rapid consumption
  • Consumption with conservation
  • Consumption and conservation with recycling

14
U.S. Supply of Minerals
  • U.S. use exceeds its own supplies of many
    minerals
  • Importing may be more practical than mining

15
Impacts of Mineral Development
Bingham Canyon Cooper Pit, Utah
16
Social 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

18
Minimizing EnvironmentalImpacts of Mineral
Development
19
Recycling
UW recycling video http//www.youtube.com/watch?v
kWMPNiEzAkw
20
Minerals and Sustainability
  • Simultaneously exploiting and sustaining mineral
    resources is problematic
  • Human ingenuity is important
  • How long does it take to develop new approaches?
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