Approaches to Estimating the Erosional Stability of the Nabarlek Tailings Pit Cover
    
    - Organization:
 - The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
 - Pages:
 - 8
 - File Size:
 - 769 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jan 1, 1994
 
Abstract
The cover (cap) over the tailings pit at Nabarlek uranium mine must be  structurally stable as it will act as a barrier to radon gas emission and have  to contain other long-lived radionuclides. Structural stability is primarily  an issue of erosional stability in the context of a design life of thousands  of years. The primary agent of erosion is fluvial, dominated by rainwash,  overland flow, filling and gullying in the local area. Other agents of  erosion are of less concern although biogenic agents of erosion (eg  termites and windthrow) may enhance fluvial activity. Several methods may be used to assess erosional stability. They fall  into two main categories, namely erosion modelling and geomorphic  modelling. The former is illustrated by the Universal Soil Loss Equation  in which parameters describing aspects of the geotechnical and  hydrological properties of the rehabilitated surface are used as input for  the modelling of erosion rates. The latter is illustrated by estimates of  gully and valley erosion using empirical models. Estimates of the erosion  rates and stability of the Nabarlek cover are presented. The two main techniques are complementary and it is argued that  rehabilitation design must make use of both approaches when estimating  erosion and geomorphic stability. More recent developments in  geomorphic modelling using numerical techniques incorporate both  approaches.
Citation
APA: (1994) Approaches to Estimating the Erosional Stability of the Nabarlek Tailings Pit Cover
MLA: Approaches to Estimating the Erosional Stability of the Nabarlek Tailings Pit Cover. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1994.