Abstract
Mining at the Red Dog Mine generated a 60 million-tonne waste rock stockpile that produces acid rock drainage with pH values typically below 3. The drainage chemistry is controlled by the competing kinetics of acid-generating iron sulfide weathering and acid-neutralizing carbonate and phosphate dissolution. To evaluate the interaction of these reactions, waste rock was collected from the stockpile by drilling a borehole from the surface to a depth of 52 m, terminating at the shale bedrock. A temporal paste pH test was conducted to extend the utility of the static paste pH test to a continuous (30 min) measurement of pH and ORP over a 24-h period. The 24-h paste pH results revealed multiple acid-generating and acid-neutralizing reactions: pH values ranged from 3.31 to 6.96. Mineralogical analysis indicated initial acidic conditions in 12 of the depth intervals (upper and lower zones) were due to the release of stored acidity from soluble iron sulfate minerals. Subsequent pH increases were driven by calcite dissolution and likely phosphate and clay mineral acid-neutralizing reactions. Conversely, late-stage pH decreases in the lower middle zone indicated the presence of highly reactive/available iron sulfide surfaces, which allowed for earlier acid generation compared to less reactive/available iron sulfide minerals in other zones. The utility of this temporal paste pH test and associated mineral analysis is to understand the mineralogical controls on early temporal acid generation to guide batch reactor testing of remaining acid potential under saturated conditions. This sequential approach provides critical information for predicting long-term acid generation and information management of the stockpile for mine site remediation and closure.