Morro Velho

Coordinates: 19°35′S 43°31′W / 19.59°S 43.51°W / -19.59; -43.51
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Morro Velho
Location
Morro Velho Gold Mine is located in Brazil
Morro Velho Gold Mine
Morro Velho Gold Mine
Location in Brazil
Morro Velho Gold Mine is located in Minas Gerais
Morro Velho Gold Mine
Morro Velho Gold Mine
Morro Velho Gold Mine (Minas Gerais)
LocationNova Lima
StateMinas Gerais
CountryBrazil
Coordinates19°35′S 43°31′W / 19.59°S 43.51°W / -19.59; -43.51
Production
ProductsGold, silver, arsenic
Production329,000
Financial year2009
History
Opened1835
Owner
CompanyAngloGold Ashanti
WebsiteAngloGold Ashanti website

Morro Velho, also called AngloGold Ashanti Brasil Mineração, after its current owner AngloGold Ashanti, is a complex of gold mines located near the city of Nova Lima in the Minas Gerais state of Brazil.

It is one of two mining operations of the company in Brazil, the other being the Serra Grande Gold Mine.

In 2008, the Brazilian operations contributed 8% to the company's overall production.[1]

History[edit]

The mines have been in operation since 1725 and came under the proprietorship of the English Saint John Del Rey Mining Company in 1834. In this period the mine was amongst others instrumental in the establishment of a hydro-electrical power plant, a state of the art hospital, the Villa Nova AC association football team, which had some importance between the 1930s and 1970s and the construction of a circa 10 kilometre tramway line between Nova Lima and Raposos, considered the first in South America.

In 1915, the Morro Velho mine reached a vertical depth of 5,824 feet, which made it the deepest mine in the world.[2][3] The miners continued going deeper, and the mine kept the title of world's deepest until 1928, when the Village Deep mine in South Africa reached a vertical depth of 8,000 feet, exceeding the depth of the Morro Velho, which was 7,126 feet in 1929.[4][5] The mine changed its ownership later on to the Carvalhaes family.

In 1975 the South Africa-based Anglo American Corporation, a precursor to today's AshantiGold, became owners of the operations. These days Morro Velhos is the world's oldest continuously worked mine. Some of the mines' works are over 3,000 meters (9,800 feet) deep underground. Although Morro Velho's main production is gold, silver, arsenic, and other minerals are also extracted at the mining complex.

Despite closing of the Minha Velha and Engenho D'Água mines in 2003 and 2004, gold production has increased over the past three years, with 240,000 ounces (6,800 kilograms) of gold produced in 2004 at an average recovered ore grade of 0.222 ounces per ton (7.62 grams per metric ton). Cash costs of production totalled $133 per ounce, with the mine realizing adjusted operating profit of $45 million.

In 2009, the mine employed close to 3,000 people, 2,250 of those being permanent staff.[6]

Production[edit]

Recent production figures of the mine were:

Year Production (ounces) Grade Cost per ounce
2003 [7] 228,000 6.84 g/t US$ 141
2004 [7] 240,000 7.85 g/t US$133
2005 [7] 250,000 7.27 g/t US$169
2006 [8] 242,000 7.60 g/t US$195
2007 [6] 317,000 7.48 g/t US$233
2008 [6] 320,000 7.62 g/t US$300
2009 [6] 329,000 7.02 g/t US$339
2010

Images[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ AngloGold Ashanti: Country report Brazil Archived 2011-07-07 at the Wayback Machine AngloGold Ashanti website, accessed: 13 July 2010
  2. ^ ”World’s deepest mines in U.P.,” Michigan Manufacturer and Financial Record, 12 Feb. 1916, p.7.
  3. ^ ”The world’s deepest mine,” Mining Congress Journal, May 1924 p.229.
  4. ^ Thomas Phelps, “The world’s deepest mine,” Popular Mechanics Magazine, 1928, v.49 p.467.
  5. ^ Jacob E. Gair, Geology and Ore Deposits of the Nova Lima and Rio Acima Quadrangles, Minas Gerais Brazil,” US Geological Survey, Professional Paper 341-A, p.A54-A55.
  6. ^ a b c d Annual Report 2009 Archived 2011-09-12 at the Wayback Machine AngloGold Ashanti website, accessed: 9 May 2010
  7. ^ a b c Annual Report 2005 Archived 2011-07-19 at the Wayback Machine AngloGold Ashanti website, accessed: 11 July 2010
  8. ^ Annual Report 2006 Archived 2011-07-07 at the Wayback Machine AngloGold Ashanti website, accessed: 11 July 2010

External links[edit]