Crustal Imaging and Characterization Team
Major focuses of the Mineral Resources Program for the next ten years will be preparation for the national quantitative mineral-resource assessment (QMRA) beginning in Fiscal Year 2010, and the actual execution of the assessment. Methodologies exist for QMRA as a starting point for the new national assessment, but methods to acccomplish a national-scale MEA are still in need of refinement. Thus, the results of this project are essential prerequisites for the upcoming national assessement.
Beyond the USGS, environmental considerations have become an increasingly important aspect of modern mining. The mass exodus of the metal mining industry from the United States in 1990s, in part, was motivated by lax environmental laws in less developed countries. However, in recent years these countries have been enacting stricter environmental laws related to mining. Further, the recent drastic increases in mineral resource consumption accompanying modernization and economic growth in developing countries has triggered a renewed interest in mineral-resource exploration and development throughout the world. Thus, in the future the United States may regain parity with developing countries for attractiveness for metal mining. One of the best ways to aid the decision making process for land use managers and the mining industry as a whole, both nationally and internationally, is to enhance our scientific understanding of the processes that control the environmental and environental health issues associated with mineral deposits prior to and resulting from mining and mineral processing, which is the primary focus of this project.
| Geoff Plumlee | Box 25046 MS 973 Denver, CO 80225 |
303-236-1204 gplumlee |
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