Open pit flooding as a post-closure option: a geochemical approach
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Van Coller, André Abel
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University of the Free State
Abstract
Showing abstract in English
English: Australasian, European, Canadian and American geo-environmental specialists
have long been involved with pit lake studies in the physical processes and
dynamics as well as the geochemical aspects of these mitigation methods and
events. The use of pit flooding as an environmental post-closure option has
however been studied and used to a limited extent in Southern Africa and Africa to
a whole, with some recorded cases mostly being by accident rather than a
planned mitigation. This document is a written paper on a hydrogeochemical
investigation on the feasibility of flooding an open pit platinum mine in the
Bushveld Igneous Complex as a post-closure mitigation option.
Various data sets and sources were compiled and processed and served as input
data into a hydrogeochemical model of the expected impacts on the conceptual
meromictic pit lake environment. Weathering and speciation models allowed the
evaluation of the current system with thermodynamic and chemical reaction
processes leading to the hydrochemical composition of the groundwater as we
observe it in the field. Furthermore transient mixing simulations between
groundwater, surface water and rain water was allowed to occur under various
reducing and evaporative conditions. The modelled lake chemistry was then
evaluated against recreational, agricultural and domestic water use standards to
investigate the feasibility of the lake to be used post-closure.
Final recommendations and mitigation methods were proposed with the flooding
of the open pit as a post-closure option declared feasible. A final deliverable of
the study was a system thinking and modelling template for hydrogeochemical
modelling in various scenarios to guide other scientist through the process of
modelling fluid-rock, fluid-waste and fluid-fluid interaction.