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Responsible Mining 101: Recommended Practices - Part 6




I am a millennial. I perceive technological progress as a positive sign of human evolution. I live in a fast paced world with tools such as smartphones and internet connection, ride in airplanes and vehicles to transport me to great distances. One way or the other I owe this life I lead to miners who extract minerals. Minerals that are necessary components of the things I use every day.

As we travel on and discover everything we need to know about responsible mining, we stumble upon recommended practices for improving exploration activities.

The use of improved exploration technologies and practices can significantly minimize habitat disturbance. In light of possible environmental effects caused by exploration activities, the goal of an environmentally sound exploration project should be to disturb only those areas with a high probability of containing economic ore bodies. What allows mining companies to find prioritized targets and the reduction of building roads and disturbing the ground is the development of improved technologies in satellite imaging and remote sensing, it has the capacity to dramatically reduce the need for speculative drilling to find potential ore bodies.

To minimize an invasive physical verification of thick vegetation masking the underlying geology of tropical areas mining companies can use geophysical techniques. These techniques can remotely determine the magnetic and electric properties of the rocks. Portable satellite trackers allow geologists to determine the longitude, latitude and elevation of deposit. The use of these remote techniques should be maximized to avoid unnecessary disturbance of multiple land plots during exploration.

The removal of vegetation and soil should be minimized, especially in tropical forests where topsoil is thin and fragile. Where topsoil must be removed, it should be stored in low mounds with plant litter and reused within six months to maintain seed viability and microbial activity within the soil.

For geological, geochemical and geophysical surveys, gridlines can be marked with wooden pegs or biodegradable flagging tape instead of bulldozing the area. If the cutting of vegetation is required, when feasible mining companies should be careful not to cut any trees larger than five centimetres in diameter or taller than three meters.

So, the steps toward minimizing land-clearing would be to:
1.    Use new technologies, such as satellite imaging and remote sensing, to increase the accuracy of exploration operations and decrease the need for extensive land clearing.
2.    Conduct a baseline environmental study of the area to identify the natural or biological features that might be affected by the operation.
3.    Store removed topsoil for use in future reclamation activities.

Exploration planning should include a baseline environmental study to identify natural, biological or cultural features likely to be affected by the exploration process or proposed mining operations. This information can be used to determine the timing and location of exploration activities, in order to limit the impact of exploration on fragile ecological aspects of the region such as bird migration routes and breeding times or farming activities.

There goes another phase of how we can face the world with the aid of mining. Please be patient with me and follow this blog to be enlightened on responsible mining.

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