Environmental assessment of copper-gold-mercury mining in the Andacollo and Punitaqui districts, northern Chile
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2004-11Metadata
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Higueras, Pablo
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Environmental assessment of copper-gold-mercury mining in the Andacollo and Punitaqui districts, northern Chile
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The Coquimbo region has been one of the richest producers of Cu, Au and Hg in Chile, and some of the deposits have been mined almost continuously since the 16th century. To assess the potential environmental contamination in this region, the authors measured the concentration of Cu, As, Cd, Zn and Hg in samples of stream and mine waters, stream sediments, soils, flotation tailings, and mine wastes in the Andacollo (Cu, An, Hg) and Punitaqui (Cu-Au, Hg) districts. The concentration of Hg in the atmosphere in these districts were also measured. Although contamination is strongly controlled by the ore in each district, metal dispersion is modified by the degree of metallurgical processing efficiency as shown by the outdated Cu flotation system at Andacollo (stream sediments Cu 75-2200 mug/g). Conversely, more efficient procedures at Punitaqui resulted in less stream contamination, where stream sediments contained Cu ranging from 110-260 mug/g. However, efficient concentration by flotation of a given metal (e.g. Cu) may lead to the loss of another (e.g. Hg up to 190 mug/g in the tailings at Punitaqui), and therefore, to contamination via erosion of the tailings (downstream sediments Hg concentrations up to 5.3 mug/g). Continued use of Hg for Au amalgamation at Andacollo has led to significant contamination in stream sediments (0.2-3.8 mug/g Hg) and soils (2.4-47 mug/g Hg). Communities in this region are underdeveloped, and decades of inefficient treatment of flotation tailings and waste-rock stock piles has resulted in significant contamination of the surrounding landscape.
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APPLIED GEOCHEMISTRY 19 (11): 1855-1864 NOV 2004
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