Mining

ITASCA offers advanced, first-hand knowledge of mining challenges around the globe and a collective pool of expertise covering a wide range of mine operations, from hard to soft rock mining using both open pit and underground techniques. The company understands the unique geomechanics, hydrologic, and microseismic problems associated with surface and underground mines and the logistical constraints that are encountered in solving them, including:

  • Slope stability
  • Subsidence/mining-induced ground deformations
  • Mine dewatering
  • Ground control
  • Excavation stability
  • Pit and underground blasting efficiency
  • Caveability
  • Recovery and dilution
  • Fragmentation
  • Backfill design
  • Tunneling design
  • Tailings dams design and stability
  • Solution mining and caverns
  • Microseismic design, processing and interpretation
  • Water-quality impacts
  • Heap leach performance optimization
  • Water supply
  • Water-resource impacts
  • Fate and transport analysis of chemicals in soil and groundwater
  • Support of permits and due diligence auditing
  • Hydrogeologic characterization
  • Mine feasibility evaluation
  • Pit lake chemistry
  • Mining methods selection, excavation geometries and sequences
  • Design, installation and monitoring of instrumentation systems

While Itasca utilizes a wide variety of engineering analysis tools, including analytical solutions and empirical charts where appropriate, expert use of 2D and 3D numerical models is usually of critical value to clients. Mine-scale models represent the rock mass from the ground surface to depth below the orebody and would include the lithology and geologic structure, utilizing the existing geotechnical model as input. The model would apply in-situ stresses as measured and simulate the sequential extraction of the orebody in many mining steps. At each step, displacements, strains, and the stress state in the surrounding rock is computed and the yielding or failure state of the rock mass determined. Thus, as a function of extraction sequence (and extraction ratio), the stability of any slopes or pillars and associated deformations can be estimated. To examine the stability of critical infrastructure (crusher station, ventilation raise, haulage way), a number smaller-scale numerical models may be developed.

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Latest News
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Upcoming Events
11 Aug
ITASCA Joins Caving 2026 as a Main Sponsor
We are pleased to announce that ITASCA will be participating as a Main Sponsor in Caving 2026, the leading international conference ded... Read More
15 Sept
ITASCA at EUROCK 2026: Advancing Innovation in Rock Engineering
ITASCA is pleased to announce its participation in EUROCK 2026 – ISRM Regional Symposium, taking place from 15–19 September 2026 in Sko... Read More
20 Sept
ITASCA to Participate in CouFrac 2026
ITASCA will be participating in CouFrac 2026, taking place from 20–23 September 2026 in Uppsala, Sweden. The conference brings together... Read More