Mining Mirror July 2019 | Page 36

In the stope of existing operations. The proclamation of the Barberton Biodiversity Heritage Site might have carved out portions of the Barberton greenstone belt, but these areas were by and large of lower mineral potential. Are the existing mines in Barberton still doing exploration work? How long do you think these mining companies will continue in Barberton? There might be external factors which can have an influence – such as the gold price, for example. Depth is also normally a big constraint. Historically, mining beyond the water table was often a major constraint, and the introduction of technology that resolved this increased the potential. So, unless a mine develops some sort of remote mining method that doesn’t put people at risk, the current operation may then just become too dangerous and expensive, resulting in mine closure. At Lily, for example, Vantage Goldfields changed the way they looked at the ore body historically. They didn’t have wonderful 30g per tonne payshoots, but they had enough low- grade gold that they could extract it in a bulk operation. They changed the mining method, which unlocked the metal. As a result, this became a significant gold resource in Barberton. It won’t be possible to duplicate this at every deposit, but if you look at deposits differently in terms of economics and mining methods, there is real potential to increase their value. I think the next big mine in Barberton is one we already know about; it would have been mined historically as either a high-grade shoot which might have been blind at surface or has a mineralised halo that nobody’s really looked at. Do the ore bodies at Barberton extend much deeper than what is currently mined? Yes, certainly, many deposits have not been fully delineated. The mines won’t be as deep as in the Witwatersrand, but there will definitely be opportunities to mine deeper. What are the differences between the Zimbabwean and Barberton Greenstone Belts? At the time when the gold in these two systems were formed, there were two different continents. In most current reconstruction models, the gold mineralising events pre-date their amalgamation. They formed in very similar environments and their volcano-sedimentary sequences being preserved in very similar ways. When the continents collided with each other, the Archean successions were force downwards; at the same time, granitic magma forces its way upwards. The currently exposed Greenstone Belts are preserved relics of Yes, they are, and some of the best results are coming from newly discovered extensions of known deposits. For the size-frequency study that I did, I had access to historic information in which the production of each deposit during the first 100 years was tabulated. I then added the production from 1983 to 2013. Interestingly, the mines continued exploration, not to make a new discovery, but to just to keep their operations going. These companies had actually mined more gold than what was predictable in 1983. Furthermore, the expectation for more gold has also increased in real terms, although not in relative terms. This does mean that the region is slowly becoming more mature. Its residual potential has decreased; in 1983 it was 47%, while in 2013 the residual potential was 42%. Interestingly, therefore, the known gold endowment of absolute metal had nearly trebled from 1983 to 2013 even though the residual potential is decreasing. I approached a number of the mines to determine why this is the case; I hoped they had a new geophysical technique or were doing something different to unlock all this metal. The answer was that they are actually drilling ahead of the delineated part of the orebody – and this makes sense. Once a company has delineated a decent ore body that will keep it operating for the next 20 years or so, exploration won’t be a priority. The mining companies in Barberton are fortunate in that the mineralised system simply continues, and they are able to sustain their operations incrementally. [34] MINING MIRROR JULY 2019 www.miningmirror.co.za