PhotosLocation


Jwaneng_diamond_mine Latitude and Longitude:

24°31′23″S 24°42′07″E / 24.52306°S 24.70194°E / -24.52306; 24.70194
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jwaneng diamond mine
Jwaneng Mine Buildings
Location
Jwaneng diamond mine is located in Botswana
Jwaneng diamond mine
Jwaneng diamond mine
Location in Botswana
Location Kalahari Desert
Country  Botswana
Coordinates 24°31′23″S 24°42′07″E / 24.52306°S 24.70194°E / -24.52306; 24.70194
Production
Products Diamonds, 15.6 million carats in 2006 [1]
History
Opened1982
Owner
Company Debswana
Jwaneng mine from space, 2001.

The Jwaneng diamond mine is the richest diamond mine in the world [2] [3] and is located in south-central Botswana about 120 kilometers (75 mi) west of the city of Gaborone, in the Naledi river valley of the Kalahari. Jwaneng, meaning "a place of small stones", is owned by Debswana, a partnership between the De Beers company and the government of Botswana. It is the second newest of four mines operated by the company, having begun operations in 1982.

Jwaneng is an open pit mine. The mine produces 9.3 million tons per year of ore and an additional 37 million tons per year of waste rock. The mine is located on three kimberlite pipes that converge near the surface, covering 520,000 square metres at ground level. Currently, the mine produces approximately 11 million carats (2,200 kg) of diamonds. [4] The recoverable ore grade at the mine is about 1.25 carats per ton (250 mg/t). As of 2005, known reserves will allow production at current levels to continue for 27 years. The high rate of diamond extraction, combined with high quality diamonds fetching excellent per weight prices, make the Jwaneng diamond mine the richest diamond mine in the world by value of recovered diamonds.

Jwaneng employs over 2,100 people. The mine also owns and operates a local hospital (Jwaneng Mine Hospital), primary school (Acacia Primary School) and Jwaneng Airport. The mine maintains an ISO 14001 certificate for environmental compliance, being the first mine in Botswana to achieve this certification in 2000. Jwaneng is known for its excellent safety record, winning multiple national and international safety awards. [1]

The Enhanced Thematic Mapper Plus (ETM+) instrument on NASA’s Landsat 7 satellite acquired this image of the Jwaneng Diamond Mine on May 17, 2001. The arid, flat landscape that fills most of this image appears in varying shades of brown, crisscrossed by pale beige roads. The Jwaneng Diamond Mine appears in the upper left quadrant of the picture, and a residential area appears near the bottom center.

At the center of the diamond mine, a series of concentric circles cut deeper and deeper into the ground. Surrounding the pit is a network of roads and structures related to the mining operation.

The settlement southeast of the mine contrasts with the arid landscape as much as the mine does. Here, tiny dots of green hint at trees and grassy parks. The pale beige rectangles around the perimeter of this image are probably crops or fallow fields. [5]

The Jwaneng mining lease includes the Jwana Game Park, which includes a field unit of Cheetah Conservation Botswana. The game park is also host to the globally threatened lappet-faced vulture. [1]

References

  1. ^ a b c Debswana Jwanneng operations Archived 2012-03-17 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ "Inside the world's richest diamond mine - CNN.com". CNN. Retrieved 2015-12-03.
  3. ^ Lock, N. (February 2019). "Jwaneng - the untold story of the discovery of the world's richest diamond mine". Journal of the Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy. 119 (2): 155–164. doi: 10.17159/2411-9717/2019/v119n2a8. ISSN  2225-6253.
  4. ^ "The state of 2013 global rough diamond supply". Resource Investor. January 22, 2013. Archived from the original on January 28, 2013. Retrieved 2013-02-04.
  5. ^ New Images: Jwaneng Diamond Mine, Botswana. This article incorporates public domain text from this NASA webpage.