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Asbestos Fibre and Mineral Counts from Filtered Dust Collected in Human Settlements Asbestos Mine Dumps in Mpumalanga Province, Republic of South Africa
Author(s) -
Kwata Mg
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
hsoa journal of environmental science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2643-5020
DOI - 10.24966/escr-5020/s1003
Subject(s) - asbestos , mining engineering , coal mining , truck , tailings , human settlement , environmental science , waste management , environmental protection , coal , engineering , metallurgy , materials science , aerospace engineering
Dust generation sources come from mining sites including mine dumps, crushing, hauling, grinding and offloading of waste material from open pit and underground operation and non-operations, movement of trucks on unpaved roads, etc. Many mine dumps in South Africa are not rehabilitated due to the possibility of re-mining in the case of asbestos dumps or have been abandoned by previous owners for different reasons. Some of the reasons for abandonment include bankruptcy, ineffective enforcement, lack of financial assurance, minimal penalties for non-compliance and commodities like gold, asbestos and coal are affected. Historically, only long asbestos fibres were used for manufacturing purpose. While short fibres were unwanted

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