Archive:000/Minerals/table: Difference between revisions
< Archive:000 | Minerals
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|colspan="6" align="center"|'''Mining''' | |colspan="6" align="center"|'''Mining''' | ||
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|69 | |69,000,000 <ref name="mcs2023">Mineral Commodity Summaries 2023: U.S. Geological Survey, ISSN: 0076-8952 (print), https://doi.org/10.3133/mcs2023 - https://pubs.usgs.gov/periodicals/mcs2023/mcs2023.pdf</ref> | ||
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| | |{{p|<q>Global resources of bauxite are estimated to be between 55 billion and 75 billion (metric) tons and are sufficient to meet world demand for metal well into the future.</q> ... <q>As a general rule, 4 tons of dried bauxite is required to produce 2 tons of alumina, which, in turn, can be used to produce 1 ton of aluminum.</q>}} 16,000,000,000 <ref name="mcs2023" /> | ||
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|4 | |4,100,000,000 <ref name="mcs2023" /> | ||
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|41 | |41,000,000 <ref name="mcs2023" /> | ||
|560 | |560,000,000 <ref name="mcs2023" /> | ||
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|190 | |190,000 <ref name="mcs2023" /> | ||
|8 | |8,300,000 <ref name="mcs2023" /> | ||
|25 | |25,000,000 <ref name="mcs2023" /> | ||
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|Copper (Cu) | |Copper (Cu) | ||
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|22,000,000 <ref name="mcs2023" /> | |||
|890,000,000 <ref name="mcs2023" /> | |||
|{{p|<q>A U.S. Geological Survey study of global copper deposits indicated that, as of 2015, identified resources contained 2.1 billion tons of copper, and undiscovered resources contained an estimated 3.5 billion tons.</q>}} 3,000,000,000 <ref name="mcs2023" /> | |||
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|Gold (Au) | |||
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|3,100 <ref name="mcs2023" /> | |||
|52,000 <ref name="mcs2023" /> | |||
|{{p|15,000 discovered + 18,000 undiscovered}} 33,000 <ref name="mcs2023" /> | |||
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|Graphite (C) | |Graphite (C) | ||
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|1,300,000 <ref name="mcs2023" /> | |||
|330,000,000 <ref name="mcs2023" /> | |||
|800,000,000 <ref name="mcs2023" /> | |||
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|Iron (Fe) | |Iron (Fe) | ||
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|1,300,000,000 <ref name="mcs2023" /> | |||
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|Lead (Pb) | |Lead (Pb) |
Revision as of 06:08, 16 February 2023
Mining | Recycling | ||||||||||
Mineral | Labor intensity (hours/tonne) |
Energy intensity (GJ/tonne) |
Land intensity (m2/tonne) |
Global production (tonnes/year) |
Global reserves (tonnes) |
Global resources (tonnes) |
Note | Labor intensity (hours/tonne) |
Energy intensity (GJ/tonne) |
Global production (tonnes/year) |
Global presenceDefined as: The total amount ever mined to date. This could theoretically be seen as a "resource" to eventually recycle. (tonnes) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aluminium (Al) | 69,000,000 [1] | Global resources of bauxite are estimated to be between 55 billion and 75 billion (metric) tons and are sufficient to meet world demand for metal well into the future.... As a general rule, 4 tons of dried bauxite is required to produce 2 tons of alumina, which, in turn, can be used to produce 1 ton of aluminum.16,000,000,000 [1] |
In 2022, aluminum recovered from purchased scrap in the United States was about 3.4 million tons, of which about 56% came from new (manufacturing) scrap and 44% from old scrap (discarded aluminum products). Aluminum recovered from old scrap was equivalent to about 29% of apparent consumption.[1] | ||||||||
Cement | 4,100,000,000 [1] | ||||||||||
Chromium (Cr) | 41,000,000 [1] | 560,000,000 [1] | |||||||||
Cobalt (Co) | 190,000 [1] | 8,300,000 [1] | 25,000,000 [1] | ||||||||
Copper (Cu) | 22,000,000 [1] | 890,000,000 [1] | A U.S. Geological Survey study of global copper deposits indicated that, as of 2015, identified resources contained 2.1 billion tons of copper, and undiscovered resources contained an estimated 3.5 billion tons.3,000,000,000 [1] |
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Gold (Au) | 3,100 [1] | 52,000 [1] | 15,000 discovered + 18,000 undiscovered 33,000 [1] | ||||||||
Graphite (C) | 1,300,000 [1] | 330,000,000 [1] | 800,000,000 [1] | ||||||||
Iron (Fe) | 1,300,000,000 [1] | ||||||||||
Lead (Pb) | |||||||||||
Lithium (Li) | |||||||||||
Nickel (Ni) | |||||||||||
PGMs Platinum-group metals (Pt, Pd, Rh, Ir, Ru, Os) | |||||||||||
Sand | |||||||||||
Silver (Ag) | |||||||||||
Thorium (Th) | |||||||||||
Uranium (U) | The energy density of uranium is much higher, at 574699 GJ/tonne for conventional nuclear reactors, and 82099829 GJ/tonne as a theoretical maximum for breeder reactors. Uranium occurs in nature as a mix of two isotopes: U235 (0.7%) and U238 (99.3%). Conventional nuclear reactors can only make use of the U235 component. |