Pyhäsalmi Mine

Pyhäsalmi Mine

Old tower and surrounding buildings of Pyhäsalmi mine
Location
Pyhäsalmi Mine
Location Pyhäjärvi
Region Northern Ostrobothnia
Country Finland
Coordinates 63°39′31″N 26°02′28″E / 63.65861°N 26.04111°E / 63.65861; 26.04111Coordinates: 63°39′31″N 26°02′28″E / 63.65861°N 26.04111°E / 63.65861; 26.04111
Production
Products Copper, Zinc, pyrite, Silver, Gold
Type Underground
History
Opened March 1, 1962 (1962-03-01)

Pyhäsalmi Mine, the second deepest metal mine in Europe[1] (having depth of 1,444 metres or 4,738 feet[2]:5) is located at the Pyhäjärvi municipality in the south of Oulu province, Finland. The zinc and copper mine is owned by First Quantum Minerals, a Canadian mining corporation.

History

In 1958 a local farmer discovered gossan ore during a well construction. Shortly after a sample was delivered to Outokumpu Corporation for analysis and a more thorough geological survey was commenced, revealing a rich volcanogenic massive sulfide ore deposit (VMS-deposit) rich in zinc and copper. In 1959 a decision was made to open a new mine in the area and after few years of construction the mine was opened on March 1, 1962.[3]

Pyhäsalmi mine was worked as an open cast pit until 1967, when underground mining operations commenced. In 1975, open cast mining was stopped. During the years the underground mine has been made gradually deeper. The so-called Olli Shaft was completed in 1985, making the mine 730 metres (2,400 ft) deep. New ore was discovered yet deeper, and a depth of 1,050 metres (3,440 ft) was reached in 1996. Later a new shaft, called Timo Shaft was built to exploit the ore deposit between 1,050 and 1,440 metres (3,445 and 4,724 ft). Timo Shaft's construction work completed in 2001.[3] By 2003, 38.2 million tons of ore have been processed, containing 1.2% copper, 3.1% zinc, gold 0.46 grams per ton, and silver 14.6 grams per ton. 15.6 million tons of ore remained.

The mine houses the Centre for Underground Physics in Pyhäsalmi.

The mine is also the home of the worlds deepest sauna, at 1,410 metres (4,626 ft) underground.[2]:7 (Guinness World Records)

First Quantum Minerals announced it would close the mine in 2018. The waste piles contain sulphur, which Yara International uses for its production at Siilinjärvi.[4]

References

  1. Geological Survey of Finland: Pyhäsalmi Mine, retrieved on 2007-10-14
  2. 1 2 Peltoniemi, Juha (2005-02-05), Underground Physics in Pyhäsalmi Mine (PDF), retrieved 2014-10-01
  3. 1 2 PYHÄSALMI MINE, Informational leaflet, Inmet Mining, 2002(?)
  4. "Yara kjøper gruveavfall – foredles til råstoff". Teknisk Ukeblad. Retrieved 2 September 2016.
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