THE TILDEN MINE
There are, at present, two iron mines operating in the UP--both
are in the Marquette Range. This page is devoted to the Tilden Mine,
although the other (Empire) Mine is equally impressive. Marquette
County's Empire and Tilden mines together produce 20% of North America's
iron ore. When the Empire and Tilden mines are producing
concentrated iron ore pellets at full capacity, they produce (combined)
nearly 16 million tons a year. Open-pit iron mining in the 21st century
is an expensive proposition that uses explosives, computers, telecommunications
equipment, immensely powerful machinery and huge quantities of energy
to convert iron-bearing rock into marble-sized pellets of concentrated
ore. To justify the huge investment in such machinery, the mines
run 24-hours a day, seven days a week. When they need to cut production,
they often shut down entirely for a period of weeks, rather than attempting
to operate below capacity.
An old image of the Empire processing plant, and its very large open
pit, are shown below.
Source: Image Courtesy of Tilden Mine
Source: Image Courtesy of Tilden Mine
THE TILDEN OPEN PIT IRON ORE MINE
The Tilden mine is a longstanding feature of the UP. The image
below shows that it was in existence in 1930!
Source: Image Courtesy of Tilden Mine
Tilden: Iron Ore Reserves
In the first century of mining in Michigan’s Upper
peninsula, high-grade ore was mined and shipped directly to the steel
mills. By the 1950's, high-grade reserves in North America were rapidly
being depleted and the industry launched extensive research projects
to find methods to utilize the low-grade reserves which were available
in abundance.
The ore being mined today was once considered worthless
rock because there was no practical method to unlock the iron bearing
material. If those methods had not been devised, North American steel
mills would have been forced to look elsewhere in the world for this
vital commodity.
While most North American iron mines use a magnetic
separation process to upgrade magnetite ores, the initial Tilden flow
sheet was new technology for processing non-magnetic hematite ore. The
hematite pit lies within a belt approximately 2 miles long and ½
mile wide. Entering the 1990s, this pit had reserves capable of producing
over 300 million tons of pellets.
In 1989 a new pit, in magnetite ore, was opened.
It is a much smaller ore body and is expected to allow for the production
of 4 million tons of pellets per year for approximately 15 years.
Mining
Millions of tons of material are mined each year to produce
pellets at capacity levels. Some is rock and overburden which must be
removed to gain access to the iron bearing minerals. This process is
known in the industry as stripping.
Marquette Range ore is composed of both magnetite
and hematite ores. All of the Marquette Range ore currently mined
is excavated from open pits using diesel-powered off-road trucks
loaded by electric and diesel-powered shovels. The ore, which in the
ground consists of 25 to 45 % iron by weight, is pelletized at processing
plants adjacent to each mine.
The life-of-mine stripping ratio in the hematite
pit is about one-half to one, and in the magnetite pit it is about one
to one. That means that a half ton of rock must be removed to gain access
to every ton of hematite ore, and one ton of rock must be mined for every
ton of magnetite ore. Now, since the ore is about 35% iron, three tons
of iron bearing material must be mined for every ton of pellets produced.
To produce 6 million tons of pellets, for example, the Tilden mine must
remove about 30 million tons of ore and rock combined, from its open
pit mine (below)
Source: Photograph by Randy Schaetzl, Professor of Geography - Michigan
State University
The Tilden facility can mine either reserve, but
it cannot process hematite and magnetite simultaneously without further
changes in the flow sheet. The production from each area in a given
year will depend on owner and customer requirements.
Transporting the ore to the plant is done using extremely
large trucks, such as the one shown below. On a recent February
morning, pit dispatcher Dennis Trudgeon sat before a bank of computer
screens in a building on the lip of the Empire Mine, using strokes on
a keyboard to direct mining trucks to spots where they were needed in
the huge open-pit mine. Though the 900-foot-deep pit was obscured in a sea
of pea soup fog, Trudgeon could track the movements of the fleet of trucks,
loaders and power shovels. Global positioning satellite units and wireless
communication equipment are mounted on each vehicle and linked through
a computer system.
Source: Image Courtesy of Tilden Mine
Here's part of a conversation between a reporter and Bob Reynolds, who
drives one of those huge trucks in a gold mine in the western US:
Is it safe to say the truck you drive is bigger
than your house?
Yes. And I actually sit roughly two stories up to drive it. The tires
are about 14 feet tall, and if loaded correctly, the gross weight would
be 1.1 million pounds.
So is the fuel tank as big as a bathroom?
Not a great big bathroom, but it’s goat a 1,200-gallon fuel tank. And
every 12-hour shift you have to get fuel. I’ve been told by Komatsu,
the truck’s manufacturer, that the engines can run that truck at 80 mph.
Right now they’ve got it turned down to 40 mph. Someone comes with a
laptop and sets the top speed to whatever the mine company wants. It
won’t run any faster than that. But even with a payload, it will go 40 mph.
Ever blown a tire?
The other day I was fully loaded going up a ramp, and I had a blowout
on the left front tire. It blew a two-foot hole in the ground! Seconds
after it did that, you could still see stuff falling down in my headlights.
When it blew, the truck dropped right down on one side—that’s a six-foot
drop from the middle of the axle down. They couldn’t change the tire
right there and they wanted to wait for the day shift to come in, so it
just sat there on the ramp with the flashers on.
What else can go wrong?
When I was working at a previous mine, one guy’s truck caught on fire.
Somebody hollered to him, "Hey, you’ve got a wheel-motor fire!" By the
time the guy realized what was happening, the truck was engulfed underneath.
If you have a fire, you need to shut the truck down so the fire isn’t
fueled by hydraulic oil. But he didn’t, and he stayed inside the cab
until the heat got so bad that he couldn’t take it. When he bailed out
of it, he bailed out into flames.
Have you ever seen anybody accidentally
run over something small, like a car?
A surveyor one time parked his Bronco pickup in the wrong place, and
a guy rolled right over it and didn’t even know he had done it. The car
looked like it went through a compactor. Someone had to holler to the
guy and say, "Hey, man, you just ran over that pickup!" He had no idea.
In time, it is the cost of transporting the ore from the ever-deepening
pit bottom that will close these mines. Economically, it is the cost
of transportation (including not only diesel fuel but labor, tires, capital
equipment, etc.) that trims the profit margin to zero and causes the
mine to close--not the diminished quality of the ore.
Source: Image Courtesy of Tilden Mine
Processing
Turning crude ore into pellets occurs in the mine’s concentrator
and pellet plant. During concentrating, there are some steps which
are identical and others which are unique to hematite or magnetite.
The process in the pellet plant is the same for either type of ore.
Mining Operations
Mining operations are the same in either of the
huge open pit. The open pit of Tilden's "sister" mine (the Empire Mine)
is shown below. In a few years, the bottom of this mine will be
the lowest spot in all of Michigan!
Source: Image Courtesy of Tilden Mine
Prior to blasting, rotary drills drill 16-inch holes 50 feet deep in
precisely laid out patterns, which can include as few as 30 or as many
as several hundred holes. They are filled with explosives and set off
in a carefully controlled blast, which breaks up the material for mining.
Source: Image Courtesy of Tilden Mine
Electric shovels load the broken material into trucks
for transport from the pit. Initial pit equipment included shovels with
11 cubic yard buckets and 85 ton production trucks. For the 1990s, the
mine is converting its fleet to 170 and 190 ton trucks.
Source: Image Courtesy of Tilden Mine
The crude ore is hauled to the primary gyratory crusher,
where it is reduced to chunks less than 10 inches in size. From the crusher,
the ore is conveyed to a covered ore storage building.
Grinding
Liberating the iron mineral requires that the crude ore
be ground to the consistency of face powder. This process begins in the
same way for both magnetite (metallic gray, below) and hematite (red-brown,
below) as crude ore and water are fed into large primary autogenous mills.
The term autogenous means that grinding media like the steel balls and
rods used in some mills are not required. Instead, the tumbling action of
the ore in the rotating mills is sufficient to reduce it to a consistency
of beach sand. Tilden has twelve primary mills that are 27 feet in diameter
and 14 ½ feet long.
Source: Photograph by Randy Schaetzl, Professor of Geography - Michigan
State University
Ore is dumped from the trucks into crushers (below).
Source: Image Courtesy of Tilden Mine
Further grinding occurs in grinders and pebble mills (below) which also
operate autogenously. Grinders (below) and pebble mills (second
photo below) are, put quite simply, cylinders that continuously roll
and turn. Inside them are rocks (ore) of various sizes.
Source: Image Courtesy of Tilden Mine
Source: Image Courtesy of Tilden Mine
The larger pieces of ore essentially act as grinders, crushing the smaller
pieces into powder. As the larger pieces of ore ("pebbles") get
comminuted in size, more large pieces are added. In the pebble
mills shown above, pebbles about 2 inches in size which are screened
from the primary mill are used as grinding media. In grinders, larger
rocks are used. Thus, grinders preceed pebble mills in the comminution
process. The Tilden concentrator has twenty-four 15 ½ foot
diameter pebble mills, each about 30 feet long.
Concentrating Magnetite
First ground to a fine powder, the ore is next concentrated
using magnetic separation and flotation to 60 to 65 % iron, then rolled
into 3/8" dia pellets that are purplish-grey when they emerge, steaming,
from the plants.
Turning low-grade crude ore into high-grade concentrate
requires a means of separating the iron particles from the waste rock.
In the magnetite operation, magnetic separators known as cobbers and
finishers (see image below) help perform that function.
Source: Image Courtesy of Tilden Mine
The mixture of finely ground crude ore and water
enters the separator tanks where stainless steel drums with powerful
internal magnet systems attract and recover the magnetic iron particles,
while the non-magnetic silica is washed away as waste, known as tailings.
Tilden has 54 cobbers in the primary grinding circuit
and 60 finishers. Magnetite processing also utilizes deslime thickeners
for hydraulic concentration prior to magnetic finishing and flotation
of silica as the final concentrating step.
Concentrating Hematite
When processing hematite, Tilden must use a flotation system
specially developed for the mine’s fine-grained ore, rather than by magnetic
separation.
The finely ground mineral particles are conditioned
by adding caustic soda and a dispersant in the grinding process. Then
a cooked corn starch is introduced to selectively flocculate (or gather
together) the very fine iron particles. The separation occurs in twenty-four
large tanks know as deslime thickeners where the flocculated iron particles
settle and are recovered in the underflow while the fine silica tailings
are carried away in the overflow. The material is then fed to the flotation
circuit consisting of three hundred 500 cubic foot flotation cells. Here,
further separation occurs as silica is removed in the froth overflow
through a process known as amine flotation, producing a high-grade iron
ore concentrate.
Processing-General
After the material has been concentrated using the magnetic
or flotation process, dewatering begins as the material is thickened
in large settling tanks. From the thickener, the mixture of high grade
iron-ore and water is pumped into concentrate slurry storage tanks.
To produce fluxed pellets, a mixture of limestone
and dolomite is also ground to a very fine size and added to the concentrate
slurry tank at the desired rate. If it is not added to the pellets, the
limestone and dolomite must be added at the blast furnace. The specific
mix and amount of flux material in the pellets can be tailored to the
customer’s (i.e., the steel mill’s) specifications.
Filtering is the final step in the concentrator.
Large vacuum disc filters dewater the concentrate in preparation for
pelletizing.
Pelletizing
Iron ore concentrate (known as "filter cake") provides
the ingredient for the mine’s final product, but it must be put in a
form which is suitable for shipping and for handling in the blast furnace.
The powdery iron ore concentrate is mixed with a small amount of bentonite
clay binder and then rolled into marble-sized pellets in balling drums.
The image below shows the inside of a balling drum, with thousands of
round pellets within.
Source: Photograph by Randy Schaetzl, Professor of Geography - Michigan
State University
Tilden has 14 balling drums which are 12 feet in diameter and 33 feet
long. The rust color of pellets that have laid exposed to the weather
is entirely natural, as the iron in the pellets is chemically combined
with oxygen to form iron oxide, more commonly known as rust. Small
amounts of silica, alumina, manganese, limestone and bentonite make up
the rest of the pellet. Bentonite (an extremely sticky clay) is added
at the rate of 16 lbs per ton as a binder. Limestone, which serves as
a flux in the steel-making process, is added to the pellets at the processing
plants to simplify blending at the steel mills.
Leaving the balling drums, the pellets are the proper
size and shape, but they are too soft for handling. The unfired pellets,
or "green balls", are thus conveyed to the travelling grate furnace where
the temperature is gradually increased to dry and pre-heat them. The
pellets then enter the huge rotary kilns where they are hardened by firing
at temperatures above 2200 degrees F. The pellets leaving the kiln enter
a cooler where they are cooled to a temperature suitable for conveying.
Source: Photograph by Randy Schaetzl, Professor of Geography - Michigan
State University
As the diagram below shows, the use of iron ore pellets
in steel mills is increasing year by year, and soon almost all mills
will use pellets exclusively as their source of iron for the blast furnaces.
Source:
Unknown
Shipping
The Lake Superior & Ishpeming Railroad (LS&I),
contrary to what has been widely published, does not haul "taconite"
pellets, but what are properly referred to as "processed iron ore" pellets.
Magnetic taconite ore, extensively mined on the Mesabi Range of Minnesota,
is not found in appreciable quantities on the Marquette Range.
The ore bodies at the Empire and Tilden Mines are instead composed of
magnetite and hematite ores; when it occurs in commercial deposits the latter
is referred to as jasper. These pellets are conveyed from the plant
to the stockpile or the load-out bin. The stockpile has a capacity
of 3,000,000 tons of pellets, while the load-out bin can fill up to 450
railroad cars per day.
Source: Image Courtesy of Tilden Mine
Pellets travel by rail to ports in Marquette and Escanaba where they
are shipped by Great Lakes ore carriers to steel mills in the United
States and Canada.
Source: Unknown
The image below shows an ore freighter unloading taconite (flux) pellets
at a steel mill.
Source: Photograph by Randy Schaetzl, Professor of Geography - Michigan
State University
The Empire Mine, in the Marquette Range, has an annual
capacity of 8.0 million tons. Most of its production goes to boats
through Escanaba to steel mills in the Chicago area. By way of
comparison, its neighbor the Tilden Mine has a capacity of 7.8 million
tons and most of its tonnage goes through the Marquette dock mainly to
the Algoma Steel Plant in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario.
Environment
The Tilden Mine was designed to include modern pollution
control processes and equipment. Water receives careful attention at
both ends of the processing operation.
To meet the need for a dependable source of water,
the Greenwood Reservoir was constructed on the middle branch of the Escanaba
River. This man-made lake includes 1,400 acres, 26 miles of shoreline
and 13 major islands. In addition to providing water for the mine, the
Reservoir is open to the public for a variety of recreational activities.
Nearly all of the water used in the plant is re-circulated
through the use of large tailing thickeners and a re-use water pond system.
Fresh water use is approximately 5% of the total process water requirements.
The water used for processing the iron-bearing material
through the concentrating process also carries the silica, or tailings,
to a large impoundment know as a tailings basin. At the Gribben Basin,
which serves the Tilden Mine, the water is decanted and clarified so
it can be returned to the watershed meeting all government clean water
standards.
Air quality is also important and Tilden uses modern
electrostatic precipitators to remove particulate matter from all waste
gas streams entering the environment.
My thanks to the Tilden Mine people for providing
much of the text for this page, from their Tilden Mine pamphlet---Prof.
Schaetzl
This material has been compiled for educational use only,
and may not be reproduced without permission. One copy may be printed for
personal use. Please contact Randall Schaetzl (soils@msu.edu)
for more information or permissions.
|