Showing posts with label Silver Mining. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Silver Mining. Show all posts

Wednesday, 19 January 2022

Analysing silver from Phoenician hoards.

From about 4000 BC onwards the use of silver became widespread in the ancient world. This was obtained by smelting lead-ores in a furnace, and then cupellatiting (oxidising) the resultant metal to separate silver and gold. Lead ores, generally galena (lead sulphate) and cerussite (lead carbonate), were typically mined by a deep pit method, digging vertically down to a seem then following it horizontally. Silver  was important to many ancient peoples, among whom were the Phoenicians, who built city states such as Tyre, Sidon and Byblos, ‘Akko and Dor in Lebanon and on the northern shores of the southern Levant during the Iron Age, roughly from the eleventh century BC onwards, and who travelled widely on trading expeditions, bringing innovations such as the alphabet, murex-based purple dyeing and masterful craftsmanship to the western Mediterranean, where they established colonies in North Africa, Sardinia and Iberia. In the ninth century BC the Phoenicians began to exploit jarosite (potassium-iron sulphate) ores in Iberia, from which silver was also extracted as a biproduct.

Cupellation remained the most common way to obtain silver throughout the classical period, producing silver that still contains small amounts of lead. This is useful to modern archaeologists, who can use lead-isotope analysis to determine the source of silver. Other elements tend to be largely purged from the silver by this method, although gold and bismuth isotopes have sometimes been used to determine the origin of silver. 

Silverware was widely used as a trade commodity in the Near East before the adoption of coinage, with more than 40 silver hoards dating to between 2000 and 600 BC having been unearthed in the southern Levant.

In a paper published in the journal Applied Sciences on 12 January 2022, Tzilla Eshel of the Zinman Institute of Archaeology and School of Archaeology and Maritime Cultures at the University of Haifa, Ofir Tirosh of the Fredy and Nadine Herrmann Institute of Earth Sciences at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Naama Yahalom-Mack of the Institute of Archaeology at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Ayelet Gilboa, also of the Zinman Institute of Archaeology and School of Archaeology and Maritime Cultures at the University of Haifa, and Yigal Erel, also of the Fredy and Nadine Herrmann Institute of Earth Sciences at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, present the results of a study which used lead and silver isotopes in silver artefacts to show changes in the source of silver reaching the southern Levant over a period of almost 1500 years, spanning the Bronze and Iron ages.

 
Map of the Southern Levant showing sites with Bronze and Iron Age silver hoards. Svetlana Matskevich in Eschel et al. (2022).

Examination of the lead isotope content of 250 silver items from 22 hoards suggests that Middle Bronze Age items (dating from between 2000 and 1550 BC), were made using silver from Anatolia and the Aegean. In the Late Bronze Age (from about 1550 to about 1250 BC), a time when gold probably replaced silver as the main trading currency, silver from the mines of Laurion (about 50 km south of Athens) begins to appear. During the Early Iron Age (roughly 1200 to 950 BC), following the end-Bronze Age collapse, silver appears to have been rare in the region, and was frequently adulterated with high lead content copper, making it hard to identify the origin of the artefacts. From about 950 BC onwards, Phoenicians revived the trade in silver, importing the metal from the Taurus mountains in Anatolia, and from Iglesiente in south-west Sardinia and later from the Pyrite Belt in Iberia, then from 630 BC onwards Greek traders slowly supplanted the Phoenicians, bringing in silver and copper from Laurion and Siphnos in the Aegean. 

This fits well with the previous understanding of the trade in sliver in the ancient Mediterranean Basin, but only gives a broad view of the geographic areas from which silver was being imported to the region; it does not shed any light on development of silver production practices and the exploitation of new ores. For this purpose, Eschel et al. turned to silver isotopes, which have a number of advantages in the tracing of the origin of ores. Silver will fractionate isotopically during supergene weathering; that is to say weathering caused by oxidation of minerals as water percolates through the rock in near surface environments, as well as during the formation of salts and sulphosalts. The upshot of this is that the proportion of different silver isotopes can vary even within different parts of the same mine, potentially giving a very high resolution way of determining the origin of the metal, and at very least, it is usually possible to tell the difference between silver minerals that formed in deep or shallow environments, with those that formed hydrothermally in shallow environments typically having a higher proportion of the heavier isotope silver¹⁰⁹ than those from deeper environments. 

This method has been applied previously to Hellenistic, Roman, and Medieval coins with some success, but not to pre-coinage silver hoards. As well as studying the origin of silver in Bronze and Iron Age hoards, Eschel et al. were able to study how the way in which the silver was preserved altered the isotopic ratio of the metal. It has previously been shown that the patterna on silver coins is isotopically lighter than the coins themselves, as the lighter isotope silver¹⁰⁷ is preferentially consumed in the making of silver sulphates. The silver from the Levantine hoards was stored in different ways, with some hoards stored in ceramic vessels, some in cloth bundles, and some in both, offering different levels of protection against intrusions by ground-water, which will tend to re-mineralise silver, altering its isotopic composition.

 
Silver hoards analysed in the study: (a) silver from the Shiloh hoard (without pendant), courtesy of the Israel Museum, Jerusalem. (b) Silver from hoard Tell el-‘Ajjul 1312, courtesy of the Israel Antiquities Authority. (c) The Dor silver hoard, the Israel Museum and the Tel Dor Expedition. (d) The ‘Akko silver hoard. (e) The ‘Ein Hofez silver hoard image courtesy of the Israel Antiquities Authority. (f) The ‘Arad silver hoard, courtesy of the Institute of Archaeology at Tel Aviv University. (g) Selected items from ‘Ein Gedi hoard, the Israel Museum, Jerusalem. Eschel et al. (2022).

Eschel et al. chose 45 silver artefacts for silver isotope analysis, all of known chemical and lead isotopic compositions and generally not suspected to be alloyed or mixed with metals from different sources. 

The oldest of these items came from the Middle/Late Bronze Age transitional period (roughly 1650-1500 BC) sites at Shiloh on the West Bank and Tell el-‘Ajjul in the Gaza Strip. The precise origin of these hoards is unclear, but both have jewelery with Anatolian motifs and lead isotopic analysis has suggested that the silver came from Anatolia or the Aegean. Both hoards were found wrapped in cloth bundles.

Silver from the Iron Age (roughly 950-700 BC) hoards at Dor, south of Haifa on Israel's Mediterranean coast, and ‘Akko in the coastal plain region of the Northern District of Israel, have been shown to come from Iglesiente, on southwest Sardinia, and have been associated with Phoenician trading in Anatolia and Sardinia in the Iron Age. The Dor hoard was found wrapped in a bundle, then placed within a ceramic vessel which was covered by a bowl, the 'Akko hoard was simply placed within a ceramic pot.

Silver items from the Iron Age (roughly 950-700 BC) hoards at ‘Ein Hofez inthe Carmel Mountains of northern Israel and 'Arad in the Southern District of Israel, on the border of the Negev and the Judean deserts have been shown to contain lead from Rio Tinto in Iberia, although this is only provides an approximate location for its origin, since jarosite ores from several parts of Iberia are known to have been brought to Rio Tinto for processing with lead. Other items from the ‘Ein Hofez hoard contain lead from Linares and other parts of Iberia, with one item coming from Anatolia. 

The Late Iron Age (roughly 630-586 BC) hoard from ‘Ein Gedi, in Israel west of the Dead Sea, near Masada and the Qumran Cave, contains silver placed unbundled within a cooking pot, covered by a ceramic lamp under the floor of a room. The lead in this silver indicates that it comes from Laurion in Greece, suggesting that it was brought to the area by a Greek trader.

Combining the silver and lead isotope analyses strongly suggests that the Phonicean hoards of Dor, ‘Akko, ‘Ein Hofez and Arad contain silver from Sardinia, Iberia and Anatolia, while the Late Iron Age hoard from ‘Ein Gedi contains Aegean silver, and the earlier, Bronze Age hoards of Shiloh and Tell el-‘Ajjul contain a mixture of Anatolian and Aegean silver. The isotopic ratios of the silver items from Phoenician hoards showed predominantly ratios consistent with having come from hypogene ores, that is to say ores that formed deep within the Earth, which had not undergone significant weathering related isotopic fractionation, whereas the isotopic ratios seen in the earlier Bronze Age and later Greek hoards showed more fractionation, probably indicating that they came from shallower ores which had undergone some surface weathering. 

While all the samples used were taken by drilling into the items to extract silver free from corrosion, some of the items still showed signs of sliver chloride formation at the level from which the sample was taken. This is symptomatic of corrosion through exposure to chlorine ions in groundwater, indicating that these samples were less protected from the environment than other samples. This was found in items from the hoards from Tell el-‘Ajjul, ‘Akko, and ‘Ein Hofez. The silver from Shiloh, Dor, ‘Arad and ‘Ein Gedi were apparently better protected. 

Based upon these findings, Eschel et al. were able to make the following observations. 

Hoards sealed in ceramic vessels were predicted to be best protected against contact with the soil and groundwater within it. The hoards from Dor (which was sealed in a vessel and bundled in cloth, and Ein ‘Gedi, which was sealed in a vessel but not bundled, showed no signs of corrosion, and therefore were apparently protected as expected.

Hoards wrapped tightly within cloth bundles were predicted to be less well protected against groundwater, though it was likely that the silver in the middle of the bundle would be protected somewhat by the silver around it. This would include the hoards at ‘Arad, which was tightly bundled and placed within a ceramic vessel, and which showed no signs of corrosion, and Shiloh, which was bundled but not placed within a vessel, where again no signs of corrosion were found.

Hoards placed within unsealed ceramic vessels were thought likely to be less well protected against groundwater. This included the hoards from ‘Ein Hofez and ‘Akko, both of which showed signs of corrosion.

Finally, silver which was neither bundled nor placed in a vessel was thought to be at the greatest risk of corrosion due to contact with the soil and groundwater. This was the case only with the hoard from Tell el-’Ajjul, which again showed signs of silver chloride formation.

The hoards from Tell el-‘Ajjul, ‘Akko, and ‘Ein Hofez all showed greater isotopic fractioning, which was taken as a sign of the silver in them having come from shallow ore sources, where this could occur prior to the silver being mined. Eschell et al. also note that the silver from these hoards also appeared to be less pure, and suggest that these combined may be a sign that they have been altered after deposition by their original owners, rather than evidence of a different mining origin or smelting technique to the other material.

Eschell et al.'s findings suggest that native silver (silver found in a pure state, which typically comes from deep, hypogene sources) was quite rare in the ancient world, and that most of the silver used came from shallow, supergene sources,

The Phoenicians are known to have brought silver to the Levan from the mid-10th century BC onwards, and from Iberia during the ninth and eighth centuries BC. It is unclear whether the Phoenicians themselves were the drivers of the improving metallurgical techniques being used in the areas where they traded, or whether they were just skilled traders able to aquire this silver and ship it across the Mediterranean. Anatolia is known to have been major centres of silver production from about the third millennium onwards, but the amount of silver being exported appears to have rapidly grown during the Phoenician era. Silver confidently assigned to a Sardinian origin is often found in Phoenician hoards, but no ancient mineworking have been discovered in Sardinia, so it is unclear when mining started there. Silver extracted in Iberia, in contrast, appears to have been exclusively developed by the Pheonicians, who targeted deep, low-lead ore bodies in the Iberian Pyritic Belt from about 800 BC onwards. The Romans began exporting silver from Iberia around 200 BC, but only targeted shallow ores with silver isotope fractionation, not the deep ores the Phoenicians were able to access.

The low levels of isotope fractionation seen in Phoenician sliver objects from Anatolia and Sardinia suggest that the Phoenicians were using the same deep-mining methods there in the tenth century BC, indicating that these people were more than talented sailors, but skilled workers in other fields, capable of transfering skills from one end of the Mediterranean to the other.

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Monday, 30 December 2019

Worker injured at New Brunswick zinc mine.

A worker has been injured in a collapse at the Trevali Mining-operated Caribou Zinc Mine in New Brunswick, Canada. A section of rock wall is reported to have collapsed onto the miner's legs during drilling operations at the underground mine, pinning him to the floor. All underground operations at the mine have been suspended while the incident is investigated, though above-ground ore-processing activities have continued.

Underground drilling operations at the Caribou Mine in New Brunswick. Trevali Mining.

The Caribou Mine accesses volcanogenic metal sulphides laid down in a marine sedimentary basin in the Cambrian-Ordovician, then subsequently subjected to complex polyphase deformation and associated greenschist and blueschist metamorphism. These deposits yield zinc, lead, copper, and small amounts of silver and gold, with current mining operations concentrating on the production of zinc, lead, and silver. The ore extracted from the mine by a process of drilling an blasting, then milled, with the metals then extracted from the milled ore in a flotation pond, where the milled sulphides from the ore is reacted to form iron pyrite, leaving the target metals in a recoverable form.

Location map for the Caribou Mine. Rock Solid Resources/Trevali Mining Corporation (2018).

See also...

https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2017/11/eddianna-gaspiana-new-species-of.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2015/03/three-people-hospitalized-following.html
https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2014/09/a-possible-cnidarian-from-late.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2014/05/magnitude-38-earthquake-beneath-st.html
https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2014/04/cottages-destroyed-by-tsunami-on-lac.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2013/09/magnitude-46-earthquake-beneath-st.html
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Tuesday, 12 November 2019

Mexican miner killed in rockfall.

A miner has died at the San Ignacio gold and silver mine in Guanajuato State, Mexico. Jesus Demetrio Ramirez Bueno, 41, died at the Great Panther Mining-owned site on the afternoon of Friday 8 November 2019. The incident is understood to have happened on an access ramp, rather than on an area of active excavation, with the area where it happened being closed while an investigation is carried out. Mining operations at the site are apparently not effected, with production continuing while the investigation is ongoing.

Mining operations at the San Ignacio mine. Great Panther Mining.

The San Ignacio mine forms part of the Guanajuato Mine Complex, which targets gold and silver precipitated in veins along faults in  a Palaeocene to Pliocene sequence of dacite-rhyolite, andesite and basalt, known as the  La Luz Vein System. These veins run north-south across the area, and predominantly contain calcite and silica, with precious metals concentrated along three main belts, the La Luz, Veta Madre and Sierra vein systems. The San Iguacio Mine is located on the La Luz Vein System.

Location map of the Guanajuato Mining District, Mexico, showing the Veta Madre, La Luz and Sierra vein systems, along with historic and recent mines. An enlargement showing veins and mines on the La Luz system is shown on the left. Moncada et al. (2017).

See also...

https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2019/10/series-of-eruptions-on-mount.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2019/03/evacuations-considered-after-explosive.html
https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2019/03/second-sinkhole-opens-up-in-troubled.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2019/01/dozens-dead-following-pipeline.html
https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2018/10/propane-gas-truck-swallowed-by-sinkhole.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2018/06/magnitude-60-earthquake-off-coast-of.html
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Saturday, 2 March 2019

Second sinkhole opens up in troubled Mexican town.

A second sinkhole has opened up in the town of Pinzán Morado in Guerrero State, Mexico, less than eight months after a similar event forced the abandonment of about 30 homes and two schools in the community. The hole, which opened up this week is about 500 m from the nearest building, and currently measures about 12 m across and 15 m deep, and therefore does not present an immediate threat, but there are concerns that it might behave in a similar way to the previous sinkhole, which opened up in June 2018 and grew to be about 40 m across and 100 m deep.

A sinkhole which opened up in the town of Pinzán Morado in Guerrero State, Mexico, this week. Mexico News Daily

Sinkholes are generally caused by water eroding soft limestone or unconsolidated deposits from beneath, causing a hole that works its way upwards and eventually opening spectacularly at the surface. Where there are unconsolidated deposits at the surface they can infill from the sides, apparently swallowing objects at the surface, including people, without trace.

The sinkholes in Pinzán Morado have been linked to former mining activity in the area, particularly the Calentana gold and silver mine, which closed about four years ago after about 25 years of operation, with residents concerned that tunnels in the mine may be collapsing now they are no longer being actively maintained, undermining the ground above and causing sinkholes to appear at the surface.

See also...

https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2017/11/striking-miners-killed-in-clash-with.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2014/05/magnitude-64-earthquake-in-guerrero.html
https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2013/09/58-feared-dead-following-mexican.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2013/09/at-least-seventeen-deaths-as-tropical.html
https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2013/09/magnitude-47-earthquake-in-guerrero.html
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Monday, 26 September 2016

Cave-in at Polish copper-mine kills two.

Two miners have died and another was seriously injured following a cave-in at the Polkowice-Sieroszowice Copper Mine in Lower Silesia Province, Poland, on Friday 23 September 2016. The cause of the incident at the KGHM Polska Miedz SA owned mine is not yet clear.

Workers at the Polkowice-Sieroszowice Copper Mine. KGHM Polska Miedz SA.

The Polkowice-Sieroszowice Mine targets metal-rich shale (clay) beds within a carbonate (limestone) dominated rock sequence. These shale beds are rich in copper and silver, being roughly 2.3% copper and 62 parts per million silver (this sounds like a small amount of silver, but it makes the Polkowice-Sieroszowice Mine the world's second most productive silver mine in the world). The mine also produced significant amounts of rock salt from different desposits. The mine has been operating since 1962, but questions have been raised about the safety of the mine this year following a series of incidents and fatalities, with this week's accident brining the number of deaths at this mine to six this year.

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http://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2014/06/rescue-operation-ongoing-at-riesending.htmlRescue operation ongoing at Riesending Cave, near Berchtesgaden in the German Alps.                                                               A rescue operation is underway at Riesending Cave, near...
http://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2013/10/three-workers-killed-by-gas-at-german.htmlThree workers killed by gas at German potash mine.                                               Three workers have died and another four needed to be rescued after a controlled explosion at a Kali & Salz (K+S) GmbH operated mine near Unterbreizbach in Thuringia at about 1.10 pm local time (about 11.10 am GMT) on Tuesday 1 October 2013, which released an undetected pocket of gas, creating a larger...

http://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2013/03/polish-miners-rescued-after-earthquake.htmlPolish miners rescued after Earthquake.      On Tuesday 19 March 2013, slightly before 9.10 pm GMT (slightly before 10.10 pm local time) the Lower Silesia Region of southwest Poland was struck by a magnitude 4.7 Earthquake at a depth of 3.7 km, close to the town of Lubin, which was felt as far away... 
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Sunday, 27 April 2014

At least four dead following Columbian mine explosion.

At least four people have died and between 65 and 95 are reported to be injured following an explosion at a mine in the Buriticá District in the west of Antioquia State, Columbia on Friday 25 April 2014. The mine is understood to be an unlicensed, informal operation, and it is thought that the explosion was caused by improper use of a locally made explosive called 'crazy dust', which is a frequent cause of fatalities in the region. A number of those injured are being treated for carbon monoxide poisoning, and it is feared that the death tole will rise, as there are thought to be miners still trapped in the mine, which is still partially flooded with the poisonous gas. Rescue workers with breathing equipment have entered the mine, but efforts are apparently being hampered by the remote and inaccessible location of the mine, which is making it hard to reach with the equipment necessary to pump air into the mine, particularly as  it is peak rainy season at the moment.

A body being carried from the Buriticá mine. La Opinion.

The Buriticá District has considerable reserves of both gold and silver, and has a number of large mines operated by international companies. It also has a large informal sector, with many mines that have no legal standing, some of which operated by criminal gangs with links to the drugs trade or even by rebel groups; the mountainous nature of the area (which is in the Andes) and Columbia's long history of political instability making the area hard to police.

The approximate location of the Buriticá mine. Google Maps.

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Wednesday, 20 November 2013

Two workers killed by gas at Colorado silver mine.

Two miners were killed by carbon monoxide poisoning and another 20 needed hospital treatment after an incident at the Silver Star Resources operated Revenue-Virginius Silver Mine near Ouray in southwest Colorado. The incident occurred at about 7.20 am local time (2.20 pm GMT) on Sunday 17 November 2013, when miners were attempting to re-enter a shaft following blasting. The dead men have been named as Nick Cappanno (34) of Montrose, and  Rick Williams (59) of Durango. 

Aerial view of the Revenue-Virginius Mine. Silver Star Resources.

The cause of the incident has yet to be determined. Pockets of gas, which can be exposed by blasting or other excavation activity are a problem in all underground mines, but carbon monoxide can also be produced as a result of incomplete combustion of some explosives. Workers at the Revenue-Virginius Mine are issued with portable gas alarms, but the toxic nature of carbon monoxide means that in sufficient quantities it can overwhelm miners before they have time to react. The incident happened in a horizontal shaft, 2.4 km from the mine entrance, but at the same level.

The approximate location of the Revenue-Virginius Mine. Google Maps.


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Wednesday, 4 September 2013

Fatality at Mexican Silver Mine.

A worker has been killed at the Porvenir Cuatro Silver Mine in Durango State, Mexico, in a rockfall incident  on 1 September 2013. The incident took place at near an underground pumping station at the mine, which is part of the Guanaceví Mine Complex operated by Endeavour Silver of Vancouver in British Columbia. The area around the accident has been closed off pending an investigation by the company and Mexican authorities, but production at the mine is said to be unaffected.

The entrance to the Porvenir Cuatro Mine. Endeavour Silver.

Endeavour Silver acquired the main part of the Guanaceví Complex in 2004, and the Porvenir Cuatro mine in 2009. It also owns two other silver mines in Mexico, the Bolañitos Mine in Guanajuato State, which it acquired in 2007 and the El Cubo Mine, also in Guanajuato State, which it acquired in 2012. The company has ambitious expansion plans for all three mines.

Simple map of the Guanaceví Mine Complex. Endeavour Silver.

The Guanaceví Complex produced 77 760 kg of silver and 245 kg of gold in 2012; gold and silver are almost invariably found together, few mines produce exclusively one or the other and the naming of sites as either 'gold' or 'silver' mines is often arbitrary.


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