Sunday, April 17, 2011

TauTona Mine

TauTona Gold Mine
TauTona Mine.jpg
Logo of the TauTona Mine
TauTona Mine is located in South Africa
TauTona Mine (South Africa)
Location Carletonville
Province Gauteng
Country South Africa
Owner
Company AngloGold Ashanti
Website AngloGold Ashanti website
JSE ANG
Production
Financial year 2009
Ounces of Gold 218,000
History
Opened 1962
v · d · e
The TauTona Mine or Western Deep No.3 Shaft, [1] is a gold mine in South Africa. At some 3.9 kilometers (2.4 miles) deep it is currently home to the world's deepest mining operations.

Contents

  • 1 Overview
  • 2 Production

Overview

The mine is one of the three Western Deep Levels mines of the West Wits gold field west of Johannesburg. The mine is near the town of Carletonville. TauTona neighbours the Mponeng and Savuka mines, and TauTona and Savuka share processing facilities. All three are owned by AngloGold Ashanti. The mine was originally built by the Anglo American Corporation with its 2 km (1.2 mi) deep main shaft being sunk in 1957. The name TauTona means "great lion" in the Setswana language. The mine began operation in 1962. It is one of the most efficient mines in South Africa and remains in continuous operation even during periods when the price of gold is low. Since its construction two secondary shafts have been added bringing the mine to its current depth. The mine today has some 800 km (500 mi) of tunnels and employs some 5,600 miners. The mine is a dangerous place to work and an average of five miners die in accidents each year. The mine is so deep that temperatures in the mine can rise to life threatening levels. Air conditioning equipment is used to cool the mine from 55 °C (131 °F) down to a more tolerable 28 °C (82 °F). The rock face temperature currently reaches 60 °C (140 °F).
By 2008, the mine reached some 3.9 km (2.4 mi) underground. This made it the deepest mine in the world, surpassing the 3,585 m (11,762 ft) deep East Rand Mine by a considerable margin. This new shaft extended the depth from its previous 3.6 km (2.2 mi), and will extend the mine's life to 2015.[2]
The journey to the rock face can take 1 hour from surface level. The lift cage that transports the workers from the surface to the bottom travels at 16 metres per second (58 km/h).
The mine has also been featured on the MegaStructures program produced by National Geographic.
In the 2008 financial year, four employees were killed at the TauTona mine, out of seven fatal accidents that occurred at AngloGold Ashanti's West Wits operations and 14 fatalities overall in the year.[3] The safety record of the mine improved in 2009, when it only recorded one fatality.[4]

Production

Production figures of the recent past were:
Year Production Grade Cost per ounce
2003 [5] 646,000 ounces 12.09 g/t US$ 171
2004 [5] 568,000 ounces 10.88 g/t US$ 245
2005 [5] 502,000 ounces 9.62 g/t US$ 256
2006 [6] 474,000 ounces 10.18 g/t US$ 269
2007 [4] 409,000 ounces 9.67 g/t US$ 317
2008 [4] 314,000 ounces 8.66 g/t US$ 374
2009 [4] 218,000 ounces 7.29 g/t US$ 559
2010


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