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Production geology is responsible for the grade and
tonnage that is mined from the ore lodes each day. They
must also ensure that all of the lodes are trucked from
the pit floor up to the Fimiston Plant.
To find the ore lodes the Mine Geologist must plan
drilling and take samples of the rock beneath the pit
floor. The method used to collect the samples is called
RC drilling. The RC holes are drilled every 10 metres
along the lode and 8 metres across, samples are collected
every 2 metres down the drill hole. Because of the old
underground workings most of the RC holes are drilled
to 40 metres beneath the pit floor. The samples are
then sent to the KCGM laboratory and are fire assayed
for gold and sulphur.
When the gold and sulphur grades are sent from the
laboratory, the geologist must plot the position of
each of the drillholes onto a plan. From the plan, a
map is produced of where the gold lodes occur beneath
the pit floor. From the map, the tonnes and grade of
the gold in the rock to be mined is determined. This
map is used by the Drill and Blast Engineers, who drill
all of the rock in the pit floor and fill it with explosives
so the ground can be broken and dug by the face shovels.
The map is also used by the Mining Engineers so they
can mine and truck all of the ore lodes to the Mill
and truck the waste rock to dumps that do not contain
gold lodes.
The Mine Geologist must then work closely with the
Drill and Blast Engineer to determine the best way to
blast all of the rock in the pit floor. Each blast at
the Super Pit has over 100,000 tonnes of rock that is
broken. Each blast breaks the rock 10 metres below the
pit floor.
After blasting the ore lodes in the broken ground are
marked up with pegs and flagging tape so they can be
easily identified by the mining face shovels. The surveyors
survey in the boundarys of the ore lodes by use
of equipment that receive coordinates from satellites.
Most of the ore lodes in the Super Pit have a pink -
brown staining (alteration) around them. These can be
seen by the human eye. To make sure all of the economic
ore lodes have been identified, the blast rock is washed
down by water. After washing, the geologist can then
walk over the blasted ground and peg out the ore lodes
by using the surveyors coordinates and by the colour
of the ore lodes in the rock.
Once the ore lodes have been marked up on the pit floor
the Mine Geologists work closely with the Mining Engineers
so that all of the ore lodes are mined. It is the Mine
Geologists job to determine the way the ore lodes are
mined by the shovels. They often sit in the face shovels
with the miners to ensure that only the ore lodes are
mined, and that rock that does not contain any economic
gold is trucked to a waste dump.
The Mine Geologist must also work with the Metallurgist
to assist them in extracting the maximum amount of gold
in the Mill Processing Plant. The geologist informs
the Metallurgist of the grade of the gold in the ore
lodes and the amount of sulphur that occurs in them.
After the gold bars have been poured the geologists
compare their estimate of the gold that was mined from
the pit with the gold that was recovered in the gold
bars. This process is called reconciliation. The geologist
does this study to help them identify if there are any
problems in the way they identify and mine the gold
from the pit floor.
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