Mining Mirror March 2018 | Page 12

Global projects and exploration The Marthinusen & Coutts team that successfully executed the sub-assembly of the six gearless mill drives. Back, from left: Wesley Ludeman (assistant winder), Chico Bernades (field service technician), Shepard Chigmwa (senior winder), and Keith van den Heever (assistant winder). Front, from left: Rico Coertze (assistant winder) and Wynand Willemse (senior field service technician). Panama Cobre installs massive motors South Africa-based Marthinusen & Coutts, a division of ACTOM, recently executed the sub-assembly of six gearless mill drives for Minera Panamá’s remotely situated Cobre Panamá Project in Panama in record time. As a result, it was able to hand the machine over to the mechanical teams for professional assembly well ahead of schedule. Minera Panamá, the Panamanian subsidiary of Canadian mining company First Quantum Minerals, is currently developing the Cobre Panamá Project, located in Colón Province. The mine life has been estimated at more than 30 years and will produce around 300 000 tonnes per year (t/y) copper, 100 000 ounces per year (oz/y) gold, and 2 500 t/y molybdenum. Of the six ABB gearless mill drives being installed at Cobre Panamá, four will power ball mills and the other two will drive SAG mills. These massive machines are among the largest ever installed in the world and were transported in quartered sections to site for assembly in situ. The sheer size of the machines, with inside diameters of 14m, presented challenges of its own, with each segment weighing approximately 80t. Work was done on four different positions on the machines simultaneously: four o’clock, six o’clock, nine o’clock, and twelve o’clock. A major challenge that the team had to contend with was the adverse weather conditions. The region receives between five and seven metres of rain per year, with ambient temperatures often exceeding 35°C and humidity levels above 80% daily. [10] MINING MIRROR MARCH 2018 Australia RC drilling underway in Kathleen Valley A reverse circulation (RC) drilling programme is underway at Liontown Resources’ Kathleen Valley Lithium Projects, 60km north of Leinster in the Eastern Goldfields of Western Australia. The drilling programme will initially comprise about 3 000m of RC drilling and will test along strike from thick zones of high-grade spodumene mineralisation intersected last year. The 2017 drill programme was curtailed due to access issues that have, according to the company, been resolved. Accordingly, the programme was unable to test the more prospective parts of the extensive pegmatite complex at Kathleen Valley. The current drilling will also test beneath outcrops where surface sampling has returned numerous high-grade lithium and tantalum values. Mexico Marlin targets Colinas TSX-listed Marlin Gold Mining has announced positive drill results from the Colinas target area, less than one kilometre from the Taunus pit within the permitted mining boundary at the wholly-owned La Trinidad gold mine in Sinaloa, Mexico. The drilling at Colinas has focused on an area that is amenable to opencast mining along a south-east trending structural corridor, which is interpreted to be an extension of the structure that controls gold mineralisation in the Taunus pit. According to Akiba Leisman, executive chair and interim CEO at Marlin Gold, internal studies applying current mining costs, along with column-leach testing results of drill core at Colinas, indicate that mineralised material from Colinas may be suitable for processing at the La Trinidad Mine. “Ideally, material from Colinas would supplement current production before we access the southern part of the high-grade HS Zone in March,” says Leisman. Mexico Drilling extends Oposura mineralisation Additional near-surface, high-grade zinc and lead drill results have extended the mineralisation previously reported at Azure Minerals’ flagship Oposura Project in the northern Mexican state of Sonora. According to Tony Rovira, MD at Azure, the latest results from the Oposura East Zone continue to be encouraging, with high-grade zinc and lead mineralisation being consistently intersected, confirming the continuity of the near to surface, massive sulphide mineralised horizon.