Tailings Dams: Difference between revisions
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{{Document Icon}} [[Tailings Management: Good Practice Guide | Tailings Management: Good Practice Guide, ICMM]] | {{Document Icon}} [[Tailings Management: Good Practice Guide | Tailings Management: Good Practice Guide, ICMM]] | ||
{{Document Icon}} [[Global Industry Standard on Tailings Management | Global Industry Standard on Tailings Management, ICMM]] | {{Document Icon}} [[Global Industry Standard on Tailings Management | Global Industry Standard on Tailings Management, ICMM]] | ||
{{Document Icon}} [[Safety Guidelines and Good Practices for Tailings Management Facilities (ECE 1326665) | Safety Guidelines and Good Practices for Tailings Management Facilities (ECE 1326665), UN]] | |||
==Trainings== | ==Trainings== |
Latest revision as of 15:14, 21 August 2023
Syncrude Tailings Dam; Fort McMurray, Alberta, Canada.
(Image Source: Wikipedia) |
An industrial waste dam in which the waste materials come from mining operations or mineral processing.
“A tailings dam is a facility that is designed and managed to contain the tailings produced by a mine. A tailings facility includes the collective engineered structures, components, and equipment involved in the management of tailings solids, other mine waste managed with tailings (e.g. waste rock, water treatment residues), and any water managed in the facility, including pore fluid, any ponds, and surface water inflows and discharges”.[1]
Life Cycle of Tailings Dams
Best Practices Resources
Tailings Management: Good Practice Guide, ICMM
Global Industry Standard on Tailings Management, ICMM
Safety Guidelines and Good Practices for Tailings Management Facilities (ECE 1326665), UN
Trainings
Citations:
Revision ID: 7644
Revision Date: 08/21/2023