Gold mining consists of the processes and techniques employed in the removal of gold from the ground. There are several techniques by which gold may be extracted from earth and rock:
Gold panning is a manual technique of sorting gold. Wide, shallow pans are filled with sand and gravel that may contain gold. Water is added and the pans are shaken, sorting the gold from the rock and other material. The gravel is usually removed from streambeds, often at a bend in the stream, where the weight of gold causes it to settle out of the water flow. This type of gold found in streams or dry streams are called placer deposits.
The cyanide technique is very simple and straightforward to apply and a popular method for low-grade gold and silver ore processing. Like most industrial chemical processes, there are potential environmental hazards presented with this extraction method in addition to the high toxicity presented by the cyanide itself. This was seen in the environmental disaster in Central-Eastern Europe in year 2000, when during the night of 30 January, a dam at a goldmine reprocessing facility in Romania released approximately 100,000m³ of wastewater contaminated with heavy metal sludge and up to 120 tonnes of cyanide into the rivers of Tisza and Danube.
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"Gold mining".
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