Abstract

Study regionThe study area is located at Kapunda, South Australia with a semi-arid climate and comprises a fractured rock aquifer. Established in 1842, Kapunda was the first mining town in Australia and its open-pit mine was a key economic driver for the whole continent. The mine was closed in 1879 and the remnant low-grade copper was considered sub-economic, hence the mine has been developed into a tourist attraction. With the recent advances in In-Situ Recovery (ISR), the feasibility of recovering the remnant copper is under consideration again. Study focusA field trial involving lixiviant injection and extraction is under development. This study uses a combination of stochastic groundwater modeling and multiple geophysical techniques to investigate (1) the flow paths of injectant and whether it will reach the Light River, and (2) the injectant residence time in the aquifer. New hydrological insights for the regionDepending on the effective porosity of the aquifer, the modeling suggests a probability of 1 %–5 % for the injectant to escape the site. There is a large uncertainty in the simulated injectant residence time, ranging from 200 to beyond 1000 days. These analyses are conservative and do not consider the biodegradability of the injectant, which can achieve a 90 % degradation over 28 days. Our modeling shows no evidence that the injectant can reach the Light River within this timeframe.

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