Abstract

AbstractOn the night of 22 February 1994, the 31 m high northern wall of the number four tailings dam of the Harmony Gold mine collapsed. The tailings dam is situated 320 m up‐slope of Merriespruit, a suburb of Virginia in the Free State Goldfields of South Africa. More than 2·5 million tonnes of liquefied tailings ripped through the sleeping mining village. Eighty houses were largely swept away and 200 others were severely damaged. Seventeen people were killed.The failure of this tailings dam shocked everybody who followed the unfolding drama of loss of life and destruction of property in the press. At the inquest following the disaster, the judge called this tailings dam a time bomb that was waiting to explode. For the first time in South African history, processed satellite images were allowed as scientific evidence in court. Together with eyewitness reports, all the evidence pointed overwhelmingly to the cause of the failure as being overtopping. The owner, the operator and six of their employees were subsequently found guilty of negligence and heavy fines were imposed.The Merriespruit disaster provided the State and the mining industry with the impetus to ensure the safe disposal of tailings. It also made the mining industry and all those involved with the design and operation of tailings dams take stock of their management and tailing disposal methods. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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