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Australian gold exploration 1976–2003
Institution:1. School of Environmental Science, Universidad Piloto de Colombia, Bogota, Colombia;2. Engineering Faculty, Universidad EAN, Bogota, Colombia;3. CIRCE. Research Centre for Energy Resources and Consumption, Universidad de Zaragoza, Zaragoza, Spain;1. Department of Applied Geology, Curtin University, GPO Box U1987, Perth, WA 6845, Australia;2. Geological Survey of Western Australia, 100 Plain Street, Perth, WA 6004, Australia;1. GNS Science, PO Box 30368, Lower Hutt, New Zealand;2. Geology Department, University of Otago, PO Box 56, Dunedin, New Zealand;1. School of Physical, Environmental and Mathematical Sciences, The University of New South Wales, UNSW Canberra, ACT, 2600, Australia;2. Department of Engineering Physics, Münster University of Applied Sciences, Stegerwaldstraße 39, 48565, Steinfurt, Germany
Abstract:The Australian gold industry has grown enormously over the past 25 years. Australian mine production of gold in 2003 was 284 t, similar to that of the USA, and behind South Africa, the world's largest gold-producing nation. Gold is Australia's third largest commodity export, worth an estimated A$5.3 billion in 2003–2004.Underpinning the industry is a solid resource base that has grown by successful exploration over the past three decades. Australia ranks third in the world after South Africa and the USA in terms of its economic gold resources. The growth in Australia's gold resources has been underpinned by high levels of exploration and innovations in gold processing technologies, specifically the development of carbon-based gold extraction methods that allowed commercial treatment of low grade ores. It has been supported by advances in gold exploration methods, especially exploration geochemistry.New resources were added at existing deposits and new deposits were found, including several of world class (>100 t contained gold), in each decade over the 25-year-period but resource growth since the 1990s has been dominated by brownfields additions rather than new discoveries. Average costs of discovery have now plateauxed at around A$20–25/oz, after falling sharply during the early to mid-1990s when a number of new discoveries were made, notably in the Yandal belt in Western Australia and the Lachlan Fold Belt in New South Wales. Current gold reserve/production and gold EDR/production ratios are 12 and 19 years, respectively, and indicate that the long-term future of the Australian gold industry depends on continued high levels of exploration and the discovery of new deposits to replace mines that are currently being depleted.
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