A Half-Century of Marine Placer Mining Viewed in Hindsight
    
    - Organization:
 - International Marine Minerals Society
 - Pages:
 - 4
 - File Size:
 - 105 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Aug 24, 2006
 
Abstract
The first, profitable, marine placer mining started with tin 100 years ago but no major  industry developed until the mid-20th. Century. Dredging at sea yielded cassiterite in both  South Thailand and Indonesia, and remains an important state-run industry in the latter  country. Malaysia and Russia have also contributed production, and the coastal waters of  Tasmania and England have been explored. Marine placer deposits of gold have been  examined in New Zealand, Chile, Argentina, Russia and West Africa. Philippino deposits  were dredged during the 1930s. Fifty years later, at Nome in Alaska, gold was recovered by  dredging from the offshore, and the technical/economic benefits of a seabed-deployed  crawler were first demonstrated. Off the coast of Namibia placer diamonds were recovered  by airlift mining during the 1960’s, but De Beers effectively started the existing marine  diamond industry in 1989. The Wirth drill and a crawler continue to be used by the company,  and plans recently have been announced for operations in South African waters. Other  commodities such as mineral sands, platinum group minerals, and chromite have been  investigated offshore in several worldwide localities.
Citation
APA: (2006) A Half-Century of Marine Placer Mining Viewed in Hindsight
MLA: A Half-Century of Marine Placer Mining Viewed in Hindsight. International Marine Minerals Society, 2006.