The development of a cover for inclined acid-generating areas, such as the external face of dykes and the slope of waste rock piles, is undoubtedly one of the biggest technical reclamation challenges at several mine sites. The LaRonde mine site, owned and operated by Agnico Eagle Mines (Quebec, Canada) is currently engaged to identify an optimal reclamation scenario for the Dyke 1 of its acid-generating tailings storage facilities. One of the promising reclamation options for controlling water infiltration in the acid-generating waste rock on the Dyke 1 is the use of an inclined cover built with available mine waste materials. An instrumented inclined cell with an inclination angle of 18.3 degrees was built on a slope of this dyke to validate if low sulfide tailings and non potentially acid-generating waste rock can be used as cover material to reclaim the Dyke 1. The instrumented inclined cell was monitored for 3 years (2017 to 2019) using volumetric lysimeters, suction sensors, and volumetric water content sensors. The monitoring was done under natural climatic conditions and artificial wetting events. Under natural conditions, less than 1% (5 mm) of incident rainfall percolated in the volumetric lysimeters installed along the slope of the inclined cell. Under controlled conditions associated with artificial wetting events of 6.4 mm/h over a period of 12 h, net percolation values between 1 and 9% (4 to 60 mm) of the sum of incident precipitation were measured. The distance between the top of the cell and the Down Dip Limit (DDL) point was greater than the slope length of the cover under natural conditions and the DDL point moved from the bottom toward the top to reach values between 12 and 20 m from the top of the slope when the wetting events were applied on the cover. These results confirmed the suitability of mining materials as an inclined cover material to control water infiltration in reactive mine waste rocks.
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