Mining Mirror October 2018 | Page 18

Mine excursion In the shadow of Circular Shaft The core of Quinert’s team consists of Eddie Milne, now operations manager of the mining operations, as well as Manie Swart and Rob Handley, geologists at Shango Solutions, both well versed in the Witwatersrand formation. Milne is an old hand at cleaning up historical gold mining areas and is well known in the Western Basin, where he was part of another Australian outfit, Mintails, who did the same just west of Krugersdorp. Mintails, in fact, acquired the prospecting mining license for West Wits soon after DRD sold out. They still hold the licenses to mine the historical dumps and tailings dams in the area. Mintails, however, once listed on the ASX, experienced financial difficulties and was very recently sold to an unknown buyer. Milne knows the area like the back of his hand and together with geologist Swart, who worked at Durban Deep for many years, they form a formidable team. [16] MINING MIRROR OCTOBER 2018 Beneath the long shadows of the historical Durban Deep Circular Shaft’s headgear, which is one of the few circular mining shafts ever to be sunk in South Africa, West Wits has started trenching the Kimberley Reef, which, at Sol Plaatjies, dips at a 40-degree angle. A big chunk of the area has been mined, plugged, and compacted and will soon be seeded as part of the rehabilitation. On surface, the rusted headgear is a constant reminder of a long, sometimes fortuitous and, at times, tumultuous history. West Wits plans to refurbish the old infrastructure to access what will remain of the reefs in five or six years’ time. In the meantime, they will continue to unearth the easy, shallow pickings by means of opencast mining — a method South African gold mining companies have always shied away from. The mining method includes no blasting. Ripping open the surface revealed the extent of mining that has taken place here since 1886. A labyrinth of tunnels and all other means to access the reefs is testimony to the ingenuity of man in his search for gold. Many stories have been told over the past century; most profoundly though, the Kebble ghost lingers. Brett Kebble was killed at the end of one of the most extraordinary stories ever to be written about mining on the Rand. And Durban Deep is part of that story. The Kebble link When Roger Kebble was chairman of DRD, the shafts at Durban Deep Mine produced between 65 000 and 85 000 ounces of gold per year. Brett Kebble owned the adjacent Randfontein Estates, which is today the Doornkop Mine owned by Harmony Gold. In a highly complex and (it has to be said) shady deal, the two Kebbles agreed, verbally, to consolidate these properties. They knocked down the processing plant at Durban Deep to access the gold dust embedded in its foundations