Title: GEOLOGY and MINERAL RESOURCES
1GEOLOGY and MINERAL RESOURCES
2Geologic Processes Structure of the Earth
Fig. 4-7 p. 60
3Major Rock Groups
- Igneous
- Formed from a melt (molten rock)
- Plutonic (intrusive)slow cooling and
crystallization - Volcanic (extrusion) quick cooling at the
surface - Sedimentary
- Formed at the Earths surface
- Metamorphic
- Changed by pressure, temperature and fluids.
4Fig. 2.9
MAGMA
5 IGNEOUS
Crystallization
MAGMA
6 IGNEOUS Plutonic
Crystallization
MAGMA
7Volcanic IGNEOUS Plutonic
Crystallization
MAGMA
8Weathering
Volcanic IGNEOUS Plutonic
Crystallization
MAGMA
Uplift
9External Earth Processes
- Erosion (wind, water, gravity)
- Chemical weathering (precipitation
- Moisture)
- Biological weathering (root wedging,
- borrowing)
10SEDIMENT
SEDIMENT
Weathering
Volcanic IGNEOUS Plutonic
Crystallization
MAGMA
Uplift
11Erosion
SEDIMENT
Weathering
Transport
Deposition
Volcanic IGNEOUS Plutonic
SEDIMENTARY
Crystallization
MAGMA
Uplift
12Erosion
SEDIMENT
Weathering
Transport
Deposition
Volcanic IGNEOUS Plutonic
SEDIMENTARY
Crystallization
MAGMA
Uplift
13Erosion
SEDIMENT
Weathering
Transport
Deposition
Volcanic IGNEOUS Plutonic
SEDIMENTARY
Increased PT
METAMORPHIC
Crystallization
Burial
MAGMA
Uplift
14Erosion
SEDIMENT
Weathering
Transport
Deposition
Volcanic IGNEOUS Plutonic
Can you see any shortcuts?
SEDIMENTARY
Increased PT
METAMORPHIC
Crystallization
Melting
Burial
MAGMA
Uplift
15Erosion
SEDIMENT
Weathering
Transport
Deposition
Volcanic IGNEOUS Plutonic
SEDIMENTARY
Increased PT
METAMORPHIC
Crystallization
Melting
Burial
MAGMA
Uplift
16In Conclusion
- The rock cycle demonstrates the relationships
among the three major rock groups - It is powered by the interior heat of the Earth
- The energy from the sun
- It involves processes on the Earths surface as
well as the Earths interior.
17Features of the Crust and Upper Mantle
18Plate Tectonics
Fig. 16-5 p. 336
19Divergent Boundaries
- Spreading ridges
- As plates move apart new material is erupted to
fill the gap
20Iceland An example of continental rifting
- Iceland has a divergent plate boundary running
through its middle
21Convergent Boundaries
- There are three styles of convergent plate
boundaries - Continent-continent collision
- Continent-oceanic crust collision
- Ocean-ocean collision
22Continent-Continent Collision
- Forms mountains, e.g. European Alps, Himalayas
23Himalayas
24Continent-Oceanic Crust Collision
- Called SUBDUCTION
- Area is called the subduction zone
25Transform Boundaries
- Where plates slide past each other
Above View of the San Andreas transform fault
26Earths Major Tectonic Plates
27Natural Hazards Earthquakes
28Expected Earthquake Damage
Fig. 16-7 p. 337
29Natural Hazards Volcanic Eruptions
30Volcanic Eruptions
- Pyroclastic Flow cloud of ash and debris
- Travel at hundreds of mph
- Hundreds of degrees
31Volcanic Eruptions
- Lahar mud flows which are very destructive to
landscape
32Volcanic Eruptions
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vUK--hvgP2uY
- Ash emitted includes small stones
- Very dense
- Chokes life
- Blots out sunlight
- Causes wide range temperature drops
33Tsunami
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37Nonrenewable Resource
- Resource that exists in a fixed amount in various
places in the Earths crust and has the potential
for renewal only by geological, physical and
chemical processes taking place over hundreds of
millions of years. - Mineral Resources naturally occurring,
inorganic solid in or on the earths crust that
can be extracted and processed into useful
materials at an affordable cost.
38Nonrenewable Mineral Resources
- Metallic ores (Fe, Cu, Al)
- Non-metallic (salt, gypsum,
- clay, sand, PO4)
- Energy resources (coal, radioactive isoptopes,
oil, natural gas) typically not mineral
resources
39Nonrenewable Mineral Resources USGS Categories
- Identified
- know location,
- quality and quantity
- Reserves -
- known location,
- affordable extraction
- Other -identified/
- undiscovered but NOT reserved
40Finding Nonrenewable Mineral Resources
- Satellite and air imagery
41Extracting Nonrenewable Mineral Resources
- Open-pit (surface mining)
- Dredging (surface mining)
- Area strip (surface mining)
- Contour strip (surface mining)
- Room-and-pillar (subsurface mining)
- Longwall (subsurface mining)
42Open Pit Mining (surface)
- Machines remove mineral resource.
43Dredging (surface)
- Dig underwater mineral deposits
44Area Strip Mining (surface)
- Strip mining in flat landscape areas.
45Contour Strip Mining (surface)
- Creation of terraces along contour elevations
where overburden is removed and a high wall is
created which is very erodable.
46Mountaintop Removal
- Dragline cuts the top of the mountain off and
dumps it into the surrounding valley.
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48Room and Pillar (subsurface)
- This method creates shafts dug below the surface
that are then blasted with dynamite to create
tunnels. The ore/coal can then be hauled to the
surface.
49Room Pillar Method
Room and pillar mining is commonly done in flat
or gently dipping bedded ores. Pillars are left
in place in a regular pattern while the rooms are
mined out. In many room and pillar mines, the
pillars are taken out, starting at the farthest
point from the mine haulage exit, retreating, and
letting the roof come down upon the floor. Room
and pillar methods are well adapted to
mechanization, and are used in deposits such as
coal, potash, phosphate, salt, oil, shale, and
bedded uranium ores.
50Longwall (subsurface)
- Dig a narrow tunnel supported by removable
pillars. The benefit is that no tunnels are left
behind to collapse once abandoned.
51Subsurface vs. Surface Mining
- Subsurface mining is less environmentally
destructive than surface mining BUT - Subsurface mining is more dangerous to workers.
Walls collapse, explosions from gas, inhalation
of mining dust leads to black lung
52U.S. 1872 Mining Law
- Encourages mining in the USA for gold, silver,
lead, copper, uranium, and hard rock minerals. - People OR Corporations can patent public land by
- a. Declaring it has valuable minerals
- b. Spending 500 to improve land for mineral
development - c. Filing a claim for the land
- d. Pay US Government 2-5/acre!
- MINERALS NEVER NEED TO BE EXTRACTED
- Can sell land to extraction companies for
millions of dollars (usually foreign companies)
who pay no royalties to US Government.
53Colorado Case Study
- Canadian Company bought a site for a few thousand
dollars. - They spent 1 million dollars developing the site,
removed 98 million dollars worth of gold. - Acid mine drainage leached into the Alamusa
River. - Company declared bankruptcy and abandoned the
site leaving the EPA Superfund to pay for clean
up ( taxpayer money) - Costs 40,000/day to contain toxic waste
- Also contaminates irrigation water (no way to
clean up)
54USA 1872 Mining Law Continued
- If public land is designated as valuable
wilderness area, the government can buy back the
land (our tax ) at market value. - Any lands mined do not have to be reclaimed.
They can be left in highly erodable states with
leaching toxins into air, water, and soil.
55Mining Company Practices
- Companies will usually
- Mine land
- Abandon the land
- File for bankruptcy
- Leave taxpayers with cleanup bill (33-72 billion
dollars per year! - Superfund sites (Super funds that the EPA
designates to be used for hazardous waste
cleanup) - If groundwater becomes contaminated, it cant be
cleaned up and there is no way of estimated the
cost to humans!
56Should the mining law of 1872 be changed?
- Environmentalists propose amendments to the law
- Lease land for 20 years instead of buying it.
- Conduct full NEPA Environmental Assessment of
impacts before mining begins. - Set strict standards for controlling pollution
and protecting environment from toxins and
erosion. - Company should post environmental insurance bond
to cover estimated environmental damage and clean
up costs in the future. - Companies should pay rent to cover costs for
government monitoring of lands. - 12.5 royalty should be paid to government on
gross sales. Mining companies claim that
charging royalties and forcing them to clean up
their mess will not make it economically feasible
to mine in USA anymore. This will lead to a
decrease in jobs for Americans.
Environmentalists claim mining companies will
still make profits, just not as much! - Make mining companies legally and financially
responsible for clean up.
57Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act
- Mine lands must be restored to pre-mining
conditions
- Taxes on mining companies to restore pre-1977
sites
58Environmental Effects of Mining Mineral Resources
- Disruption of land surface
- Erosion of solid mining waste
- Storage and leakage of liquid mining waste
59Environmental Degradation From Processing of
Minerals
- Processing includes transportation, purification,
and manufacturing of minerals - Smelting impacts air, water, and soil What goes
up must come back down
Smelting
desired ore
Gange (waste)
Beneficiation separation of additional ore from
gange
Ore
Tailings (toxic metals)
60Environmental Impacts
- Air and noise pollution
- Dust created by mining and loading/unloading
- Machine causes noise pollution and damage nearby
structures
61Environmental Impacts
- Water Contamination
- Water picks up and dissolves toxic substances
(arsenic) - Sulfur and water diluted sulfuric acid
- Acid Mine Drainage - AMD
62Environmental Impacts
63Environmental Impacts
- Displacement of Wildlife
- Stripping of plant life
- Animals leave area
- New ecosystem created after
- Destroy river and sea bottoms
64Environmental Impacts
- Erosion and Sedimentation
- Sediments find way into streams
- Choke stream life
- Degrades water quality
65Environmental Impacts
- Soil Degradation
- Deeper soil layers added to top
- Decreases richness of original soil
- Subsidence (sink holes)
- Sinking of regions of ground with no horizontal
movement
http//www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/03/01/man-goe
s-missing-in-florida-when-bedroom-falls-into-sinkh
ole/
66Environmental Impacts
- Underground Mine Fires
- Last decades and even centuries
- Australian fire 2,000 Years!!!!!
- Gas and smoke emitted
67Smelting Copper
- Cu Sox soot (SO2) As Cd Pb
Scrubbers and electrostatic precipitators are
expensive technology that help to remove the
harmful substances before being released into the
atmosphere.
68Environmental Degradation From End-Use
- Transportation to user, final use, and discarding
after use. - Fossil fuels are burned during transportation of
end product. - Product must be discarded in
- 1. landfill where metals corrode and pollute
land and water. - 2. Recycle and reuse (In USA, most goes to
landfill, but recycling of solid waste is
improving each year.
69Environmental Effects of Mining Mineral Resources
Fig. 16-14 p. 344
70More Environmental Impacts of Nonrenewable
Mineral Resources
Surface mining
Subsurface mining
Refer to Figs. 15-4 and 15-5, p. 341 and 342
71Processing Mineral Resources
- Ore mineral what is wanted
- Smelting process to remove
Refer to Fig. 16-15 p. 344
72Supplies of Non-Renewable Resources
- Dependent on
- (a) actual or potential supplies
- (b) rate of use
- Minerals become economically depleted when the
cost of extraction is greater that the profit. - What de we do? We have choices
- (a) refuse, reduce, reuse, recycle
- (b) find substitute
73Depletion of Mineral Resources
Depletion Time the time it takes to use up a
certain proportion (80) of the reserves of a
mineral at a given rate.
Common Projection Rate Reserve to Production
Ratio the number of years that proven reserves
of a particular non-renewable resource will last
at a current production rate.
74Economics of Mineral Resources
- Free Market when supply is greater than demand
cheap costs to consumers.
- Definition a market in which supply and demand
are unregulated except by the country's
competition policy, and rights in physical and
intellectual property are upheld. - In a free market there are
- Fulfillment the process of responding to
customer inquiries, orders, or sales promotion
offers. - Future a contract to deliver a commodity at a
future date. - Futures market a market for buying and selling
securities, commodities, or currencies that tend
to fluctuate in price over a period of time.
75Why are items made of Zn, Pb, Hg, Fe, and Al so
cheap, if their depletion times are nearing?
- Fe/Al 100 years in world reserves.
- Hg/Zn/Pb 20 years in world reserves.
- Subsidies to promote economic growth and
national security. Is there really a free
market? - Harmful environmental costs of mining and
processing are not included in their market
price. NO TRUE COSTING! - Ore grades have been lowered. Example 1900 Cu
penny 5 by weight, now 0.5 by weight. Ask
yourselfare reserve to ration production numbers
real? - As technology improves we learn more about where
more minerals may be on Earth and dont have to
impart tremendous damage to landforms during
exploration activities.
76Global Non-Fuel Minerals
- Mostly in the USA, Canada, Australia, South
Africa, and the Republics of the former Soviet
Union. - Western Europe depends mostly on minerals from
Africa. - USA imports 24 of the 42 most important non-fuel
minerals. - Concerns manganese, cobalt, platinum, and
chromium USA has little or no reserves and we
get them from unstable African nations. - USA uses these minerals for autos, airplanes,
engines, satellites, and sophisticated weapons!