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Cripple Creek & Victor
Key Facts
OverviewLocated in the state of Colorado in the United States, Cripple Creek & Victor's (CC&V) Cresson Project is an open-pit operation which treats extracted ore through a heap-leach pad, and is one of the largest in the world. CC&V has been mining gold in the Cripple Creek Mining District (District) since 1976. AngloGold Ashanti (Colorado) Corp., a wholly owned subsidiary of AngloGold Ashanti North America Inc (AGANA), is majority owner and manager of CC&V. On June 30, 2008, AngloGold Ashanti consolidated 100% ownership in CC&V with the acquisition of Golden Cycle Gold Corporation. AGANA, based in Greenwood Village, Colorado, is a gold mining company with exploration interests in Canada and United States, and mining interests in Colorado and Nevada. AGANA is an indirect wholly owned subsidiary of AngloGold Ashanti Ltd., one of the world’s largest gold producers, based in Johannesburg, South Africa. The Cripple Creek Mining District was mined historically in multiple underground operations until the 1960s. Mining activity then ceased for approximately a decade. Small-scale surface mining using the heap-leach gold recovery method began in 1971 followed by large-scale surface mining, which grew with the start of production at CC&V’s current mining operation, called the Cresson Project. The Cresson is named for the historic underground mining operation of the same name. The Cresson is famous for the great gold find of the District, the “Cresson Vug.” A vug is a cavity in the rock, lined with crystals somewhat like a geode. The Cresson Vug produced 60,000 troy ounces of gold that was essentially picked from the walls of a room sized void encountered about 1,200 feet below the surface in 1914. CC&V is a low-grade, surface mining operation. The ore is treated using a valley-type, heap-leach process with activated carbon used to recover the gold. All solution is continually re-circulated. The resulting doré buttons are shipped to a third-party refinery for final processing. Under current permits, mining at current production rates will continue into 2016, with gold recovery carrying on for at least another four years, followed by final reclamation and closure. LocationLocated in the state of Colorado in the United States, the Cresson-Victor district mines consist of more than 2,177 hectares of patented mining claims in and around the Cripple Creek Mining District of Teller County, Colorado and include most of the principal formerly-producing mines of the Cripple Creek district. Geology and MineralizationThe Cripple Creek gold deposits occur within a seven square mile (18 sq. km), 30 million year old, volcanic-intrusive complex that erupted and intruded through rocks that are over one billion years old. The rocks within the complex consist mostly of breccias, dikes, sills, and flows with minor amounts of fossil-bearing lake sediments, sandstones, conglomerates, and fresh-water limestones. The gold mineralization followed the emplacement of the volcanic rocks and may have occurred over a time period that lasted as long as two million years. Most of the gold was localized along major structural zones within the volcanic complex. The ore bodies occur as (1) deposits of rich, narrow, gold-telluride veins with quartz, pyrite, and fluorite and (2) deposits of low-grade, disseminated, microcrystalline, native gold attached to pyrite. Most of the gold mined in the early days of the district came from the high-grade gold telluride veins.
Mining & OperationProduction increased by 7% to 233,000oz from 218,000oz in 2009. A total of 20.7Mt of ore was placed on the heap-leach pad, compared with 18.7Mt in 2009. The active mining process begins with the drilling of blast holes, approximately 40 feet deep and 16 to 22 feet apart. The drill holes are located by Global Positioning System (GPS) mapping technology. The drill cuttings are sampled to confirm gold content. Controlled blasts of the drill holes break the rock and minimize movement. Controlled blasts help limit ground vibrations that are carefully monitored to ensure the vibrations are within strict permit limits. The broken rock, called "muck," is surveyed and marked with flags to indicate gold-bearing ore and non-gold bearing rock referred to as "overburden." Large dump trucks are then used to move the ore to the primary crusher for processing. The overburden is backfilled to previously mined areas or is moved to engineered storage areas.
ProcessingOre is processed at the two-stage crushing and screening facility and hauled to the Valley Leach Facility (VLF). The VLF is a double-lined, and in some areas triple-lined, zero-discharge area where the gold is recovered. A dilute solution of sodium cyanide is applied using agricultural-type drip irrigation tubes, which are buried under the crushed rock surface to dissolve the gold. The gold-bearing solution is captured at the bottom of the lined area. The solution containing the gold is called "pregnant solution." The gold is recovered from the pregnant solution with a carbon absorption process. The gold laden carbon is processed to create a gold-rich mud. After the gold is recovered, the solution with no gold, called "barren solution," is reconstituted and then re-circulated to the VLF to repeat the gold recovery process. The gold-rich mud is sent to the refinery furnace and heated to separate the gold and silver from any non-metal substances. The resulting 98% gold-silver mixture is called "doré" (daw-rey). The doré is shipped to a specialized refinery to be processed into 99.999% pure gold or 24 karat.
Environment & CommunityCC&V continued to be recognised as a Gold Leader in the State of Colorado’s Environmental Leadership Programme, the first mine in Colorado to attain that level of recognition. In addition, CC&V’s Environmental Management System was again recommended for continued certification under the ISO 14001 standard. In September 2010, the operation was recognised by the International Cyanide Management Institute (ICMI) to be recertified “In Full Compliance” on all nine principles of the International Cyanide Management Code (ICMC). No reportable environmental incidents took place in 2010.
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