Mining Mirror January 2019 | Page 29

In the stope Her bubbly personality instantly lights up the room as she walks through the door in a rush. With flawless hair and make-up, one would be forgiven for thinking that Dibuseng Hlole is a model when, in fact, she is a geologist and businesswoman, writes Dineo Phoshoko. A s a service provider through her company, Nichnaat Consulting, Hlole works with mining companies at exploration phase, which includes doing pre-feasibility and feasibility studies, resource estimation, drilling, mapping, and trenching. She predominantly works with junior mining companies. Growing up, Hlole had multiple career choices in mind. These included being a teacher, social worker, or pharmacist. “When I was in primary school, I wanted to be a teacher because I used to like the way they mark,” she says with a chuckle. After completing matric at Pretoria College, Hlole furthered her studies at the University of the Witwatersrand. “When I got to Wits, I was not sure what I wanted to do. I heard about geology.” Despite the fact that geology was never one of her career choices, Hlole became interested in it. She was drawn to studies about the earth and how everything evolved. She mentions an encounter during her undergraduate studies where students were taken on an excursion and were made to taste rocks as one of the methods of identifying the type of mineral at a particular geographical location. Hlole found this fun. Getting into the industry and facing challenges Establishing a career in the mining industry was not easy for Hlole and having graduated at a time when the industry was not doing particularly well did not help either. Hlole finally made her break in the industry, starting out at the rock engineering department at Tau Lekoa Mine in the North West Province. She discovered that it was an entirely different environment compared to what she had learnt at university. “You need to put the theory and the practical together for everything to make sense,” she explains. Her colleague and mentor Joggie van Oort played a significant role in helping Hlole learn all the ropes of being a geologist. “He wanted to teach me everything. He used to call me his daughter,” she says fondly. As with any career, challenges are inevitable. Going underground to www.miningmirror.co.za JANUARY 2019 MINING MIRROR [27]