The document discusses various methods used for sampling mineral deposits including core drilling, reverse circulation drilling, auger drilling, channel sampling, and trench sampling. The objectives of sampling are to estimate grades and contents of materials in an unbiased manner to allow for resource evaluation, determination of physical and chemical characteristics, and assessment of process amenability. Samples undergo geological logging and analysis to characterize properties like density, porosity, strength, and mineral content.
The document discusses various methods used for sampling mineral deposits including core drilling, reverse circulation drilling, auger drilling, channel sampling, and trench sampling. The objectives of sampling are to estimate grades and contents of materials in an unbiased manner to allow for resource evaluation, determination of physical and chemical characteristics, and assessment of process amenability. Samples undergo geological logging and analysis to characterize properties like density, porosity, strength, and mineral content.
• Generally sampling is the art(process) of selecting a
part of a whole such that the measured value for the
part is an unbiased estimate for the whole. • The objective of sampling in mineral processing is to estimate grades and contents of sampling units in an unbiased manner and with an acceptable and affordable degree of precision. • In mineral processing a whole is referred to as a sampling unit. • A sampling unit is classified as a dynamic stochastic system when sampled during transfer, and as static stochastic system when sampled whilst stationary. • Mineral deposits are sampled for several reasons including: Resource evaluation Determination of the physical and chemical characteristics of material, And process amenability. • In Placer deposits. • In simple bedded deposit. • In copper & other sulphide ore deposit. • Deposits that are not homogeneous. • Core Drilling • Reverse circulation drilling • Auger Drilling • Other drilling methods • Channel Sampling • Trench sampling • Geochemical and environmental Sampling • Water samples • Run of mine ore feed • Crusher product sampling • This is the preferred method of recovering material from within the ore body and is also the most expensive. • Generally between 27 mm to 100 mm in diameter. • Cores are generated using a circular drill bit that allows a cylinder of rock to rise • Within the interior of the drill steel as the drill progresses. • The resulting drill core generally has a smooth surface and is consistent in diameter along its length • Operates in the same manner as holes drilled for general purpose viz. boreholes • Less expensive than core drilling • The samples from each drill interval are logged separately as they come from the hole. • RC is not recommended when the exact transition from one rock to another is required viz. coal. • When material is unconsolidated Auger drilling method is used. • Soils, placer deposits of river gravel, and previously placed material such as mine waste dumps and impoundments. • The sample may consist of the entire amount of material extracted from the hole or a hollow tube in the middle of the drill stem can be used to collect materials from only desired depths. • Chip and mud samples are collected from ordinary rotary drilling • Which are less expensive but also less reliable and are used for indicative purposes only. • Specialized drills for collection of large pieces of rock such as placer sampling are also used. • Where the material to be sampled is exposed to the surface or in underground workings, channel sampling is used. • In this procedure a channel of dimensions similar to the diameter of the core or RC hole is excavated. • The resulting samples are chips similar to those recovered through RC drilling. • Channel samples have the advantage over RC samples in that the material can be geologically logged prior to excavation. • Where the material to be sampled is close to the surface, trenches are excavated to gain access to the material and samples are taken either as channel samples within the trenches or as selected samples of the excavated material. • This results in broken material • Grab samples on a random basis as it is mined or transported. • Such samples maybe useful for obtaining overall averages for large amounts of material but not Useful for identifying material characteristics at a specific location. • Expandable cylinders to measure rock strengths and stresses. • Gauges to measure ground water levels • Sophisticated tomographic techniques use sensors placed in multiple drill holes to provide detailed information on the material between the drill holes. • Work is underway to develop sensors that will be able to detect the presence of metals. • Drilling samples both core and chips are logged in order to record the material characteristics along the drill hole. • Samples are logged for: Rock types Alteration types Association of various minerals Estimated content of the desired commodity Core samples are also logged for: • fracture spacing and intensity, • Rock quality designation • And fracture orientation • Photographs are also taken of the core. The analysis includes: • In situ density • moisture content • Porosity • Total metal content • Permeability • Soluble metal content • Compressive strength • Content of non-metal commodities • Compaction • Heat content for coal and • Grinding index oil shale • Ash content after combustion • Direct measurement of mineral types is possible using QEMSCAN. These images can also be processed to provide information on: • modal abundance • Grain size • Mode of occurrence • Liberation characteristics • And quantity of mineral phase recoverable. Sources
(Ebook) Presenting Your Findings: A Practical Guide for Creating Tables by Adelheid A. M. Nicol, Penny M. Pexman ISBN 9781433807053, 143380705X, B00CPTT2NA 2024 Scribd Download