Conference Proceedings
The Fourth Australasian Ground Control in Mining Conference (AusRock)
Conference Proceedings
The Fourth Australasian Ground Control in Mining Conference (AusRock)
Evolution of rock fill consolidation at Pajingo Gold Mine
The Pajingo gold operation in Queensland is approximately 50 kilometres south of Charters Towers and 134km south-west of Townsville. The resource was discovered in 1983 and first open pit gold production began in 1986. The mine traditionally employed a bottom-up sequence - a combination of modified and traditional Avoca methods with run-of-mine waste backfill. This practice caused many high-grade crown pillars to be left in place, yet accessible. In recent years, these crown pillars have been extracted by injection grouting of rockfill. This process facilitated blind up-hole open stoping. To date, thirteen separate injection campaigns have been completed, of which ten were deemed successful. In general, the two key technical difficulties in this mining technique are: maintaining a consistent high-quality ground consolidation of the rock fill material; and controlling the drill and blast practices during stoping. Here, effective drill-and-blast control was found to be essential to achieve the dual aims of 100% extraction, and maximum sill pillar stability to minimise dilution. During stoping, the technical performance of the consolidated rock-fill was recorded; both to verify the design, and to identify operational improvements. The results showed that Pajingo has realised both reduced production down-time through use of early strength gain grout, and more rapid and thorough grout consolidation through changes to the emplacement method. The optimisation of consolidated rock fill has led to several quantifiable benefits to the mine, including: profitable extraction of previously sterilised crown pillars resulting in both increased ore reserves and production profile; improvements to the stability of grouted stope crowns, thereby reducing safety and production related; risks associated with open up-hole stopes; reduction in cost and time constraints, with respect to the grouting of loose fill; and reduction in grout curing time - from 14 days to 8 days - thereby minimising production down-time. This paper is a case study of the evolution and optimisation of the up-hole open stoping mining method at Pajingo. The challenges and successes are discussed in terms of their key mining outcomes. CITATION:McTyer, K and Carswell, J, 2018. Evolution of rock fill consolidation at Pajingo Gold Mine, in
Proceedings The Fourth Australasian Ground Control in Mining Conference (AusRock), pp 66-77 (The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy: Melbourne).
Proceedings The Fourth Australasian Ground Control in Mining Conference (AusRock), pp 66-77 (The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy: Melbourne).
Contributor(s):
K McTyer, J Carswell
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- Published: 2017
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