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sirAnthonyKlein
Joined: 17 Dec 2012
Posts: 1
Location: New York


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Posted: Dec 17, 2012 22:49 Post subject: Black Hawk Mines: Mining Scam Prevention |
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Are you in favor or are you against mining? Tell me your reasons… |
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Chris Foltz
Joined: 28 Oct 2012
Posts: 92
Location: Maryland



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Posted: Dec 17, 2012 23:21 Post subject: Re: Black Hawk Mines: Mining Scam Prevention |
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So long as it doesn't destroy the environment I'm all for using natural resources... _________________ stone-cutter |
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GneissWare

Joined: 07 Mar 2008
Posts: 1287
Location: California



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Posted: Dec 17, 2012 23:51 Post subject: Re: Black Hawk Mines: Mining Scam Prevention |
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sirAnthonyKlein wrote: | Are you in favor or are you against mining? Tell me your reasons… |
If it can't be grown, it must be mined. |
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Jesse Fisher

Joined: 18 Mar 2009
Posts: 639
Location: San Francisco



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Posted: Dec 18, 2012 00:29 Post subject: Re: Black Hawk Mines: Mining Scam Prevention |
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Most people are content to just be consumers there days. Some of us feel the need to also be producers on some level. Above all else, however, one must take care not to foul the nest in the process. |
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kieferthora17
Joined: 18 Dec 2012
Posts: 1
Location: New York


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Posted: Dec 18, 2012 00:55 Post subject: Re: Black Hawk Mines: Mining Scam Prevention |
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My friends dad died this way, a common event in coal mines is a sudden gas explosion. Such an explosion of a harmful gas can take place when human beings unmindfully put pressure on a weak spot where the gas has an outlet to escape. These explosions are very sudden and do not give enough time to victim to rush to safety. These kinds of explosions cause many injuries every year. Quality, protective clothing can help overcome this risk extent. Sadly his dad did not survive. Since then we made the advocacy ‘no to mining’. |
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Chris Foltz
Joined: 28 Oct 2012
Posts: 92
Location: Maryland



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Posted: Dec 18, 2012 06:00 Post subject: Re: Black Hawk Mines: Mining Scam Prevention |
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Sorry for your loss, but that's extremely selfish... _________________ stone-cutter |
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Darryl
Joined: 12 Oct 2009
Posts: 32
Location: Amarillo, Texas


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Posted: Dec 18, 2012 07:00 Post subject: Re: Black Hawk Mines: Mining Scam Prevention |
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Given the quality of conversations that normally occupy this forum I am not sure my comments are relevant but I want to make then anyway because many who read this forum are involved in geology in one way or another and questions such as this seem to come up frequently in public hearings on various projects. My objectives are to show that questions must be carefully phrased to be useful and to perhaps generate some thought and/or discussion on the definition of "mining".
Unless this question belongs to another conversation and is only a fragment thereof, it is a question that can not be logically answered. It is equivalent to asking: Are you in favor of or against - agriculture, drinking water, painting houses, getting married and any number of other equivalent questions. They simply do not have any practical answer. Even the anwer given by one respondent: "If it can't be grown it must be mined" is conditional, it assumes the commodity in question is essential or desired. If the commoditiy to be obtained isn't needed or wanted then there is no need to mine it or grow it.
A more properly phrased question might be: Assuming a commodity is either needed or wanted and can be obtained by mining, are you in favor of or against this particular mine?
at this time?
under these conditions?
To make matters worse the questioner didn't define mining. Three examples show the range of possabilities:
1)The definition of surface mining might be streatched by some to include picking up cobbles from the surface. That isn't an absurd example because it is against the law in a certain state in the U.S. to remove rocks from state parks and I know of one where SOME of the cobbles have enough precious metals in them to be worth over a hundred dollars apiece. On a weekend I could pick up a couple of dozen, make a few quick bucks and no one people would notice the missing stones because for all other intents and purposes they look exactly like those w/o any precious metals. Even if I did ithis for years, the total number of cobbles removed would be in the hundreds out of many many thousands scattered over hundreds of squart miles, most far removed from where visitors normally walk. I doublt hardly anyone would notice and the environment would certainly not be damaged. And if pickup up cobbles isn't quite mining but digging them up would be then is digging up tree stumps mining? Or is mining going to be restricted to situations where a large amount of "waste" material must be moved?
2) If we restrict the definition of mining to removing material from the subsurface then what about leaching of soluble compounds from the subsurface? This has recently been proposed and the mineral rights obtained to several square miles of land near where I live. The total amount of material removed would be a few thousandths of 1% of the total, the material removed highly valuable and all the solutions involved non-toxic and non-polluting as far as I know.
3) And if we stretch example 2 a bit further, is removing water from the subsurface mining? If so there go water wells. drinking water and irrigation water for many many people.
Questions such as this one need definitions and conditions to be meaningfull and usefull in any way. Otherwise they are simply an invitation to an argument. And while I am ont this topic: Is the questioner for against chocolate?
Darryl |
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Tracy

Joined: 15 Sep 2006
Posts: 551
Location: Toronto



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Posted: Dec 18, 2012 09:25 Post subject: Re: Black Hawk Mines: Mining Scam Prevention |
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What is the connection between the question posed to FMF and the post's subject line? There is no reference to scam prevention in the initial post. Could you please provide some context, ideally the basis for your question?
- Tracy _________________ "Wisdom begins in wonder" - Socrates |
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Susan Robinson
Joined: 05 Aug 2010
Posts: 163
Location: Hancock, MI


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Posted: Dec 18, 2012 11:56 Post subject: Re: Black Hawk Mines: Mining Scam Prevention |
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Mining is okay, as long as it's done responsibly. However, the coal ash and oil sands wastes are examples of toxic messes that are difficult to contain, much less get rid of entirely.
The future of mining may well be focusing on our huge landfills and what we've carelessly thrown away that could have been recycled. _________________ Susan Robinson |
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Pierre Joubert
Joined: 09 Mar 2012
Posts: 1605
Location: Western Cape



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Posted: Dec 18, 2012 13:24 Post subject: Re: Black Hawk Mines: Mining Scam Prevention |
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This topic is really a 'cat amongst the pigeons'! A typical case of land 'rape' is the diamond mining companies that operate on the coast of Namibia and some areas in the Western and Northern Cape. If you Google the coastline of Southern Namibia, you will be shocked to see the devastating effect of this greedy 'land-rape'.
To us small miners (my wife and I), the matter is simple; you dig your hole and when you're done, fill it up! _________________ Pierre Joubert
'The tree of silence bears the fruit of peace. ' |
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fionagriffin17
Joined: 18 Dec 2012
Posts: 1
Location: Portsmouth


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Posted: Dec 18, 2012 21:31 Post subject: Re: Black Hawk Mines: Mining Scam Prevention |
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sirAnthonyKlein wrote: | Are you in favor or are you against mining? Tell me your reasons… |
Mining is harmful to the environment it is one good and enough reason why we should be against mining. |
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Chris Foltz
Joined: 28 Oct 2012
Posts: 92
Location: Maryland



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Posted: Dec 18, 2012 21:40 Post subject: Re: Black Hawk Mines: Mining Scam Prevention |
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,& not utilizing a Natural Resource is as bad as wasting a Natural Resource...Luddite... _________________ stone-cutter |
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Matt_Zukowski
Site Admin
Joined: 10 Apr 2009
Posts: 737
Location: Alaska



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Posted: Dec 18, 2012 21:55 Post subject: Re: Black Hawk Mines: Mining Scam Prevention |
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Jordi:
This question is so vague as to be useless, and as Tracy posted, misleading considering the subject line. My opinion, for what its worth, is that this thread be locked, or better, deleted. |
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Darryl
Joined: 12 Oct 2009
Posts: 32
Location: Amarillo, Texas


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Posted: Dec 18, 2012 22:16 Post subject: Re: Black Hawk Mines: Mining Scam Prevention |
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I agree with Matt's opinion of this tread and his suggestion to lock or delete it. |
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Pierre Joubert
Joined: 09 Mar 2012
Posts: 1605
Location: Western Cape



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Posted: Dec 19, 2012 00:55 Post subject: Re: Black Hawk Mines: Mining Scam Prevention |
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This thread, as I understand it, directly refers to an article - see link
https://blackhawk-mining.com/2012/11/13/mining-scam-prevention/
(link normlaized by FMF)
I see no reason to close this topic. I just wish the originator supplied a link from the beginning. I also wonder whether he is the same person posting similar topics on a number of other forums. _________________ Pierre Joubert
'The tree of silence bears the fruit of peace. ' |
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