Saturday, February 20, 2010

Kennecotte Copper Mine (Greg's new job)



Greg starts his new job here in Salt Lake City, Utah. He is a commercial/industrial Electrician. As an industrial electrician he will be maintaining, doing 'change outs, and upgrading anything to do with electricity out there.
Greg has worked out at Kennecotte before. (In the 1980's I think.) He also has worked with his new boss before. Kennecote has tours, and visitor center and people come from all over the world to see this mine. I plan to go out there to tour it so I can learn more about it myself.
If your interested just google Kennecotte Copper Mine. I don't know how to put a link on my blog. duh...

Amazing Facts
About the Mine

•Kennecott's Bingham Canyon Mine has produced more copper than any mine in history - about 18.1 million tons.
•The mine is 2-3/4 miles across at the top and 3/4 of a mile deep. You could stack two Sears Towers (now known as the Willis Building) on top of each other and still not reach the top of the mine.
•The mine is so big, it can be seen by the space shuttle astronauts as they pass over the United States.
•By 2015, the mine will be at least 500 feet deeper than it is now.
•If you stretched out all the roads in the open pit mine, you'd have 500 miles of roadway - enough to reach from Salt Lake City to Denver.




About the Equipment

•The giant electric shovels in the mine can scoop up as much as 98 tons in a single bite -- about the weight of 50 cars.
•The newest electric shovels each cost more than $20 million and weigh 3.2 million pounds.
•The trucks that haul the ore are larger than many houses and weigh more than a jumbo jet. They stand over 23 feet tall and can carry from 255 to 360 tons of rock.
•The truck driver rides about 18 feet above the ground -- nearly two stories high.
•Each tire on these big trucks costs from $18,000 to $26,000 and lasts just 9 months.
•The crusher in the pit takes in about 140,000 tons of ore every day and grinds it into chunks smaller than the size of a basketball.
•At 1,215 feet tall, the Kennecott smokestack is the highest structure in Utah.




About Mining in General

•Every deposit of ore in the world is unique. No two ore bodies are alike.
•More than 320,000 people work directly in mining throughout the United States.
•Only about one tenth of one percent of the land in Utah has been touched by mining.




About the Minerals We Use

•The first known use of copper dates back 10,000 years.
•To make all the pennies, nickels, dimes, and quarters in 1999, the U.S. Mint used about 36,000 tons of copper. That's about as much refined copper as Kennecott produces every 41 days.
•Each American uses more than 40,000 pounds of new minerals every year.
•It takes about 15 different minerals to make a car ... 35 different minerals to make a television ... 30 minerals to make a computer ... and as many as 42 different minerals to make a telephone

5 comments:

sweet older sister said...

That is VERY interesting, when you take your tour let us know how it went. I had a tour at one of the open pit mines in Globe, AZ. It was interesting, and those TRUCKS really are as big as a house. Dennis' sister, Mary used to drive one of those things!!! You will have to ask her about it one day.

Pedaling said...

might be a rumor- but, once i heard that you can see the kennecotte mine from the moon....

i know i can see it from my house-
and are in a different city...

sandyseashells said...

pedaling-...that's not a rumor, the astronauts can see the mine from outer space, and the
Stack is the highest structure built in Utah.

Jen said...

Wow.

Pedaling said...

hayworth, for sure!