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  • 11
    Apr
    2013
    9:30pm, EDT

    Utah copper mine suspends operations after large landslide

    Photos by Ravell Call / The Deseret News via AP

    The Kennecott Copper Bingham Canyon Mine sits quiet after a landslide on April 11, 2013, in Bingham Canyon, Utah. Kennecott has suspended mining inside one of the world's deepest open pits as geologists assess a landslide the company says it anticipated for months.

    The Salt Lake Tribune reports:

    "We started noticing movement in that part of the mine in February," Rio Tinto-Kennecott spokesman Kyle Bennett said, indicating at that time the mine’s wall was slipping a fraction of an inch each day.

    As the slipping continued and began to accelerate in the following weeks, Kennecott moved workers out of the area, utility lines were rerouted and the modular building that housed the mine monitoring equipment was relocated to safer ground. Kennecott also closed its visitors center for the rest of the year.

    Bennett said the company has not yet determined the exact size of the slide. He said mining experts would be evaluating the slide area and its impact on future operations.

    Dump trucks sit under debris in the Kennecott Copper Bingham Canyon Mine after a landslide in Bingham Canyon, Utah.

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    20 comments

    Those trucks look like Tonka Toy's in comparison.

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    Explore related topics: landslide, environment, mining, us-news, utah, featured
  • 17
    Dec
    2012
    7:03pm, EST

    Molten gold signals revival in California's mother lode

    Rich Pedroncelli / AP

    In this photo taken Thursday, Dec. 13, Sutter Gold Mining Co. mill superintendent Paul Skinner pours the first thin stream of glowing molten gold into a mold, forming a shiny one-inch pyramid, near Sutter Creek, Calif. The company announced Monday, Dec. 17, that it poured its first gold as it prepared to begin the first large-scale Sierra Nevada underground gold mining operation in a half century.

    By Don Thompson, Associated Press 

    The last of California's great gold mines closed a generation ago. But with the price of the metal near historic highs, hovering around $1,700 an ounce, the first large-scale hard rock gold mining operation in a half-century is coming back to life. 

    Miners are digging again where their forebears once unearthed riches from eight historic mines that honeycomb Sutter Gold Mining Co.'s holdings about 50 miles southeast of Sacramento. 

    Rich Pedroncelli / AP

    Miner Keith Emerald uses a pneumatic drill to drill holes that will be packed with explosives to blast into the sold rock wall at the Sutter Gold Mining Co.'s mines near Sutter Creek, Calif.

    Rich Pedroncelli / AP

    Matt Collins, chief operating officer of the Sutter Gold Mining Co., left, watches as, from left, Allen Smith, Brain Herfel, Ted Chapman and Wayne Murphy calibrate the water flow of a gravity table at the company's newly constructed mill near Sutter Creek, Calif. The gravity table uses technology similar to those used by gold rush-era miners who used pans to separate gold from surrounding materials.

    By spring, the company's 110 employees expect to be removing 150 tons of ore a day from a site immediately north of the old Lincoln Mine, enough to produce nearly 2,000 ounces of gold each month. 

    Rich Pedroncelli / AP

    Sutter Gold Mining Co. mill superintendent Paul Skinner removes a crucible of glowing molten gold that will be poured into a mold.

    Rich Pedroncelli / AP

    Sutter Gold Mining Co. mill superintendent Paul Skinner displays a four-ounce pyramid of gold he has just poured at the new mill.

    Related content:

    • Gold and diamond rush fuels dreams in South American borderlands
    • South Sudan catches gold fever
    • Philippines' black market is China's golden connection

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  • 11
    Dec
    2012
    12:55pm, EST

    Illegal miners use bare hands and bathtubs to extract coal in Bosnia

    Dado Ruvic / Reuters

    Illegal miners prepare to transport a bathtub filled with coal in the village of Stranjani, near Zenica, on Dec. 11.

    There are about 20 illegal mines near the village of Stranjani, where Bosnians dig for coal with their bare hands and use makeshift tools, such as bathtubs, to transport the coal. One bag of their coal is sold for $4 dollars, which is popular with the locals as it is cheaper than the coal sold at the legal city mine. 

    -- Reuters

    Dado Ruvic / Reuters

    An illegal miner loads coal into a bathtub at a mine in the village of Stranjani, near Zenica, on Dec. 11.

    Dado Ruvic / Reuters

    An illegal miner sieves coal in the village of Stranjani, near Zenica, on Dec. 11.

    Dado Ruvic / Reuters

    Illegal miners transport coal in a bathtub in the village of Stranjani, near Zenica, on Dec. 11.

    Related content:

    • Gold and diamond rush fuels dreams in South American borderlands
    • South Sudan catches gold fever
    • Emboldened by political reforms, Myanmar villagers protest seized farmland from safety of monastery
    • Fire burning for 50 years in coal below Pennsylvania town of Centralia

    1 comment

    Looking at these pictures makes me appreciate what I have. That is some really dangerous work these men have to do to make a living.

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    Explore related topics: mining, world-news, illegal-mining
  • 3
    Dec
    2012
    9:57am, EST

    Gold and diamond rush fuels dreams in South American borderlands

    Jorge Silva / Reuters

    An aerial view shows an illegal mine in the jungle in southern Venezuela.

    Jorge Silva / Reuters

    An illegal miner or garimpeiro works in a mine close to the Ikabaru river in southern Venezuela.

    Jorge Silva / Reuters

    Rough diamonds are seen on the desk of a trader in his office in Santa Elena de Uairen in the south of Venezuela.

    In the triangle that connects Venezuela, Brazil and Guyana a huge number of illegal gold and diamond prospectors — garimpeiros — dream of changing their lives overnight by finding a huge bonanza. 

    Writing on Reuters' photographers blog, Jorge Silva describes his journey to document these remote mines: 

    We are just north of the Amazon Basin, riding a boat on the Ikabaru River. The passengers are people who buy gold and diamonds. They stop at each of the illegal mines that appear as craters on the river’s edge. They carry small weighing scales that seem very accurate, magnifying loupes, burners to melt the gold and separate the mercury, and some large spoons to collect it.

    They are also carrying bags full of cash.

    Jorge Silva / Reuters

    An illegal mine is seen in the southern Venezuelan state of Bolivar, near the border with Brazil.

    Jorge Silva / Reuters

    A man performs maintenance while sitting on the top of an Antonov An-2 aircraft before it departs with supplies to the mines, in the town of Ikabaru in the south of Venezuela.

    The appeal of working in illegal mining is enormous. Four grams of gold equal an average monthly wage in Venezuela. An ounce of the metal goes for over $1,700. The gold fever is understandable if you consider that an ounce used to sell for $250 ten years ago.

    But in these mines, and the towns around them, life is expensive. A bottle of water costs around $12, and a 250-liter tank of gasoline, which would cost just $5 in the rest of the country, here goes for up to $1,200. Venezuela is known for having the cheapest gasoline in the world.

    Masked men stole 70 gold bars from fishing boat in Curacao

    Those who can, work hard. They don’t know if they will be able to carry on. The government is threatening to clamp down on clandestine mining. Thousands of families and whole towns live off this activity, directly or indirectly.

    Jorge Silva / Reuters

    A garimpeiro digs with a pressure hose in Bolivar.

    Jorge Silva / Reuters

    Heavily armed guards hold their weapons outside a business licensed to buy rough diamonds and gold in Georgetown, the capital of Guyana.

    In a city nearby, a diamond buyer adjusted the gun on his waist while he greeted a miner who brought some “rocks.” He passionately explained that diamonds are the perfect currency. “You can carry thousands of dollars in the pocket of your pants without setting off any metal detector. There are no borders for them.”

    Back at the mine, Ramón walked exhausted at the end of his workday. His face, ravaged by the sun, was sprinkled with mud. When he smiled, a golden “R” became visible, inlaid in one of his front teeth. Read the full story.

    Jorge Silva / Reuters

    An miner named Ramon flashes a gold letter 'R' on his tooth as he smiles after working in a mine in Bolivar.

    Editor's note: Images taken in November, 2012 and made available to NBC News today.

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    12 comments

    The raping and pillaging of the Earth continues unabated...

    Show more
    Explore related topics: brazil, gold, venezuela, americas, mining, diamonds, guyana, world-news, featured
  • 9
    Nov
    2012
    11:03am, EST

    South Sudan catches gold fever

    Adriane Ohanesian / Reuters

    A Toposa boy walks along the Singaita River where gold has been found in Namorinyang, South Sudan.

    Adriane Ohanesian / Reuters

    A Toposa woman looks for gold in the Singaita River in Namorinyang, South Sudan.

    Adriane Ohanesian / Reuters

    A man digs a hole in search of gold in Napotpot, South Sudan.

    Adriane Ohanesian / Reuters

    A Toposa boy takes a rest after digging for gold in Napotpot, South Sudan.

    Adriane Ohanesian / Reuters

    A trader weighs his gold in a shop in Kapoeta, South Sudan.

    Adriane Ohanesian / Reuters

    A Toposa girl pans for gold in the Singaita River in Namorinyang, South Sudan.

    Adriane Ohanesian / Reuters

    Jackson Locheto from Kenya uses a gold detector in Nanakanak, South Sudan.

    In South Sudan ordinary people have been extracting gold from artisanal mines and taking part in as-yet unregulated trade in the precious metal.

    Reuters reports, dozens of Toposa tribesmen and women, festooned with plastic necklaces, brass piercings and beaded amulets, hack away at the red soil with metal poles and shovels, digging small craters in a boozy revelry.

    "Everything is luck," said Leer Likuam on the edge of a shallow trench through a translator. On an average day he might dig up six grams, worth around 1,200 South Sudanese pounds ($270), he said. "Some days you're lucky."

    Once he found a 200-gram gold nugget bigger than his thumb, boasts Likuam.

    On the international market, Likuam's prize lump would fetch $11,000, an enormous sum in a country where the average teacher earns just 360 South Sudanese pounds, about $90, per month.

    But now the government hopes to pass mining legislation that will formalize the industry, let them tax precious metal and mineral exports and sell concessions to large-scale investors. Read the complete article.

    All images were captured by Reuters photographer Adriane Ohanesian in September and October 2012, but made available to NBC News today.

    Adriane Ohanesian / Reuters

    A shirt hangs in the window of a Sarko alcohol shop in Kapoeta, South Sudan.

    Adriane Ohanesian / Reuters

    A bowl holding small flakes of gold sits in the middle of Singaita River in Namorinyang, South Sudan.

    Adriane Ohanesian / Reuters

    A view of the Singaita River which flows down from the Lauro mountains and through Kapoeta, South Sudan.

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    6 comments

    the governent will take over the river and give the corporations the profits. The poor will once again be pushed aside.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: business, gold, africa, work, mining, world-news, featured, south-sudan, natural-resouces
  • 25
    Oct
    2012
    7:17pm, EDT

    Siphiwe Sibeko / Reuters

    Striking miners react as they make way for a security vehicle at the AngloGold Ashanti mine in Carletonville, northwest of Johannesburg Oct. 25, 2012.

    AngloGold sacks 12,000 defiant South African miners

    Reuters reports — AngloGold Ashanti sacked 12,000 wildcat strikers who defied a deadline to return to work on Wednesday, the latest South African company to resort to mass firings after weeks of crippling labor unrest.

    Thousands of stick-wielding strikers responded by rallying near the operations of AngloGold, the world's third-largest bullion producer, saying they would not buckle under company pressure. Full story…

    Comment

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  • 18
    Sep
    2012
    2:27pm, EDT

    South Africa's Lonmin miners celebrate 22% pay rise to end strike

    Siphiwe Sibeko / Reuters

    Striking miners dance and cheer after they were informed of a 22 percent wage increase offer outside Lonmin's Marikana mine, 100 km (60 miles) northwest of Johannesburg, on Sept. 18. Striking miners at the mine said on Tuesday they accepted a management pay rise offer and would return to work on Thursday after six weeks of mining sector unrest that shook Africa's largest economy.

    Siphiwe Sibeko / Reuters

    Striking miners gesture after they were informed of a 22 percent wage increase offer outside Lonmin's Marikana mine, 100 km (60 miles) northwest of Johannesburg, on Sept. 18.

    Reuters -- Striking platinum miners at Lonmin's Marikana mine in South Africa accepted a pay offer on Tuesday, ending six weeks of violent unrest that claimed 45 lives and rattled Africa's largest economy.

    The strikers, grouped on a bare soccer pitch near the mine, 100 km (60 miles) northwest of Johannesburg, cheered when they were told that management were offering a 22 percent pay rise, and said they would return to work on Thursday.

    "I am happy - and forward with the struggle," said one of the striking miners, Sithembile Sohati.

    "It's a huge achievement. No union has achieved a 22 percent increase before," Zolisa Bodlani, a worker representative at Marikana, told Reuters.

    Continue reading.

    Related links on PhotoBlog:

    • Miners gather to pray for South African shooting victim at site of violence
    • Mourners pay tribute to victims of South Africa mine shooting
    • South African President Jacob Zuma addresses miners following shooting
    • South African women protest police shooting of striking miners
    • South Africa police fire on striking miners, killing 34

     

    Siphiwe Sibeko / Reuters

    Striking miners dance and cheer after they were informed of a 22 percent wage increase offer outside Lonmin's Marikana mine, 100 km (60 miles) northwest of Johannesburg, on Sept. 18.

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    Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

     

    7 comments

    White genocide by assimilation.

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    Explore related topics: protest, south-africa, africa, mining, world-news
  • 12
    Sep
    2012
    2:41pm, EDT

    Emboldened by political reforms, Myanmar villagers protest seized farmland from safety of monastery

    Soe Zeya Tun / Reuters

    Farmers cry inside a monastery, which they are using as a protest camp, in Monywa township, Myanmar, on Sept. 12. Villagers protested against the seizing of over 7,800 acres of farmland, involving 26 villages, for a copper mine project in Sarlingyi Township in Sagaing Division, about 450 miles northwest of Yangon. The mine project is a joint venture between a Chinese company and Myanmar's military-owned Myanmar Economic Holding Limited. Some villagers say they are satisfied with the compensations paid by the mining company while some others do not want to leave their village for compensation.

    Soe Zeya Tun / Reuters

    Villagers shout for their farms and villages during protests against the Lebadaung copper mine project in Sarlingyi township on Sept. 12.

    The Associated Press reports: Students have joined farmers and other people who have been protesting the seizure of land for a copper mining project in northwestern Myanmar jointly owned by the military and a Chinese company.

    The protest in Monywa in Sagaing region has been continuing since August, but expanded this week in response to the detention of its leaders, activists said Wednesday. The primary issue concerns the confiscation of nearly 8,000 acres (3,250 hectares) of land for the Monywa copper mine project, an area which includes 26 villages and several mountains.

    Emboldened by Myanmar's changing political climate, farmers, villagers, factory workers and others are now staging demonstrations in various parts of the country over issues ranging from land confiscation to electricity cuts. Read the full story.

    Soe Zeya Tun / Reuters

    Farmers look at police from inside a monastery that they are using as a protest camp in Monywa township Sept. 12.

    Soe Zeya Tun / Reuters

    Police walk in a monastery that farmers are using as a protest camp in Monywa township Sept. 12.

    • View more photos from Myanmar on PhotoBlog.
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    Comment

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  • 12
    Sep
    2012
    12:01pm, EDT

    Siphiwe Sibeko / Reuters

    Mineworkers take part in a march outside the Anglo American mine in South Africa's North West Province, on Sept. 12. Labor unrest sweeping through South Africa's mining sector hit top world platinum producer Anglo American Platinum on Wednesday, with stick-waving miners blockading roads leading to shafts and calling for a shut-down of operations.

    South Africa mine unrest spreads as Platinum hits five-month high

    Platinum was set for its biggest one-day rally in a month on Wednesday after the spread of labor unrest near the South African town of Rustenburg forced top producer Anglo American Platinum temporarily to halt its operations there. Continue reading.

    Related links on PhotoBlog:

    • Miners gather to pray for South African shooting victim at site of violence
    • Mourners pay tribute to victims of South Africa mine shooting
    • South African President Jacob Zuma addresses miners following shooting
    • South African women protest police shooting of striking miners
    • South Africa police fire on striking miners, killing 34

    Comment

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  • 5
    Sep
    2012
    3:01pm, EDT

    3000 South African miners rally demanding higher pay

    Mike Hutchings / Reuters

    Mineworkers take part in a march at Lonmin's Marikana mine in South Africa's North West Province, September 5, 2012. More than 3,000 striking South African miners marched through streets near Lonmin's Marikana mine on Wednesday, the largest protest at the hot spot since police shot dead 34 of their colleagues last month. Police armed with tear gas and assault rifles deployed armoured vehicles and helicopters to keep an eye on the stick-waving protesters.

    Thousands of South African miners marched near the Lonmin Marikana mine on Wednesday, demanding higher pay, according to Reuters. Police shot and killed 34 of their coworkers last month, but Wednesday's protest did not turn violent, Reuters reports:

    One man at the front of the column waved a placard reading "We want 12,500 or nothing else", a reference to the group's demand for a hike in base pay to 12,500 rand ($1,500) a month, more than double their current salary.

    The marchers retreated after a two-hour standoff at an entrance of Lonmin's nearby Karee mine and talks between a delegation of protesters and management. There was no violence.

    The strike for the pay rise by rock drill operators and other miners is now in its fourth week and is threatening to cripple London-headquartered Lonmin. Only 4.2 percent of its shift workers reported for duty on Wednesday. Continue reading.

    Kim Ludbrook / EPA

    Some of the thousands of striking miners from the Lonmin platinum mine march to the gates of the Karee Mine as part of their mass action in an attempt to get high wages, Marikana, South Africa, Sept. 5. Many of the miners protesting today carried posters of their fallen comrades.

    Denis Farrell / AP

    Police try to prevent striking mine workers marching to the Karee shaft at the Lonmin Platinum Mine near Rustenburg, South Africa Sept, 5 to hand over a memorandum to mine management. Miners are refusing to return to work until their demands over low pay and working conditions are met.

    Related links on PhotoBlog:

    • Miners gather to pray for South African shooting victim at site of violence
    • Mourners gather on the "Hill of Horror" at the site of mine shootings
    • Mourners pay tribute to victims of South Africa mine shooting
    • South African President Jacob Zuma addresses miners following shooting
    • South African women protest police shooting of striking miners
    • South Africa police fire on striking miners, killing 34

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    The South African politician blamed for inflaming the miners' strikes there told NBC News that the treatment of the poor is worse now than it was under apartheid. Julius Malema, - expelled from the ruling African National Congress for his radical views - says he wants to spread the chaos, that left 34 miners dead. NBC's Rohit Kachroo reports.

     

    5 comments

    Post Apartheid Africa, what has changed when these atrocities happen? That fat Australian bitch Gina Rheinhart, Cold Heart would be there with a gun, on the wrong side, Lomnis Mines turns around 2.3 BILLION $$$$$$$'s, these guys work for $200 per month, something is very wrong.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: miners, protest, south-africa, mining, world-news, platinum-mine, miners-strike, lonmin-markana-mine
  • 31
    Aug
    2012
    3:32pm, EDT

    Miners gather to pray for South African shooting victim at site of violence

    Rodger Bosch / AFP - Getty Images

    Mineworkers pray on Aug. 31, over the coffin containing the body of Mpuzeni Ngxande, one of the 34 striking miners that were killed by police on August 16, in front of the rocky outcrop where the men were shot, an informal settlement near the Lonmin mine in Marikana, North-West Province. Talks to end a three-week strike at South Africa's Lonmin platinum mine, where violence claimed 44 lives, have been postponed to Monday after two days of negotiations failed to broker a deal. Mine managers, unions, workers representatives and government mediators are seeking a "peace accord" after the killing of 34 striking workers two weeks ago by police -- the worst day of police violence in South Africa since the end of white-minority apartheid rule in 1994.

    Reuters -- South Africa's justice minister on Friday rebuked prosecutors for charging 270 miners with the murder of 34 striking colleagues shot dead by police, saying the decision had caused "shock, panic and confusion" among the general public.

    The police killing of the strikers at the Marikana mine this month was one of the worst such incidents since the end of white rule in 1994. The arrested miners have been charged under a law dating from the apartheid era under which they are deemed to have had a "common purpose" in the murder of their co-workers.

    The African National Congress, whose members used to be gunned down by apartheid police at protest rallies and targeted with draconian laws, has been severely criticized for using similar tactics now that it is in power.

    Read the full story.

    Related links on PhotoBlog:

    • Mourners gather on the "Hill of Horror" at the site of mine shootings
    • Mourners pay tribute to victims of South Africa mine shooting
    • South African President Jacob Zuma addresses miners following shooting
    • South African women protest police shooting of striking miners
    • South Africa police fire on striking miners, killing 34

    Themba Hadebe / AP

    Family members and colleagues of the late mine worker Andries Ntsenyeho, visit the scene of the shooting at the Lonmin Platinum Mine near Rustenburg, South Africa, on Aug. 31, after collecting his body at the morgue for a funeral. South Africa's justice minister is demanding the nation's top prosecutor explain a bizarre decision to charge 270 miners with the murders and attempted murders of 112 striking co-workers shot by the police. The Aug. 16 shootings that killed 34 and wounded 78 at London-registered Lonmin PLC platinum mine were the worst display of state violence since apartheid ended in 1994.

    1 comment

    If the Republicans get control we can expect to start seeing the same type of thing here.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: miners, south-africa, africa, mining, world-news, platinum-mine
  • 23
    Aug
    2012
    1:57pm, EDT

    Mourners gather on the "Hill of Horror" at the site of mine shootings

    Themba Hadebe / AP

    Mourners at a memorial service at the Lonmin Platinum Mine near Rustenburg, South Africa, Aug. 23, crowd onto the "Hill of Horror," near the site where 34 protesting mine workers were killed last week when police opened fire.

    - / AFP - Getty Images

    Mourners at the memorial service at the Maikana platinum mine.

    See today's earlier PhotoBlog on the memorial service for the miners:

    Mourners pay tribute to victims of South Africa mine shooting

    Siphiwe Sibeko / Reuters

    Miners during a memorial service for miners killed during clashes last week.

    Reuters reports: South Africans held a memorial service on Thursday at a mine where police shot dead 34 strikers, bloodshed that revived memories of apartheid-era violence and laid bare workers' anger over enduring inequalities since the end of white rule.

    Some 500 people crammed into a marquee pitched at the platinum mine, near what has been dubbed the "Hill of Horror" where police opened fire on striking miners in the deadliest security incident since apartheid ended in 1994.

    Crowds spilled out into the scorched, dusty fields outside, listening to hymns and prayers. Full story

    Photographer's blog: Witness to the deadly shooting

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    2 comments

    The shape of that hill is an ideal description of the situation in the country, isn't it?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: south-africa, africa, mining, clashes, world-news, platinum-mine, lonmin-markana-mine
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