- Snap Lake Diamond Mine
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Snap Lake Diamond Mine
A mining truck exiting the mine portal, winter 2006Location Location in Canada 63°36′20″N 110°52′00″W / 63.60556°N 110.8666667°WCoordinates: 63°36′20″N 110°52′00″W / 63.60556°N 110.8666667°W
Location 220 km (140 mi) northeast of Yellowknife Territory Northwest Territories Country Canada Owner Company De Beers Website www.debeerscanada.com Year of acquisition 2000 Production Products Diamonds Production 1.1 million tonnes of ore Financial year Annually History Opened 2007 The Snap Lake Diamond Mine is located about 220 km (140 mi) northeast of Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, and, according to De Beers, was their first mine outside Africa and Canada's first completely underground diamond mine.[1]
Construction began with the opening of an access winter road in 2005. At the end of 2009, DeBeers had spent USD$1.4 billion dollars on construction and mine operation. Of that total, DeBeers spent USD$977 million with Northwest Territories-based contractors and suppliers, including USD$630 million with Aboriginal businesses or Joint Ventures.[2]
The mine began commercial production on January 16, 2008 and was officially opened on July 25, 2008. In 2007, De Beers said they planned to employ 500 people, with 250 people working in the mine at any given moment.[1] Lifetime of the mine is estimated to be 20 years. De Beers expects to produce 1.1 million tonnes (1.2 million short tons) annually with 1.2 carats (240 mg) per metric ton.[1]
The Snap Lake mine was featured in Ice Road Truckers, a television series on The History Channel. The Snap Lake mine was also featured on the Canadian Discovery channel show Daily Planet as part of the special feature 'Daily Planet Goes North – More Ice for the Arctic'.[3]
The mine is served by the Snap Lake Airport.
See also
- Ekati Diamond Mine
- Diavik Diamond Mine
- Volcanism of Northern Canada
References
- ^ a b c "Snap Lake: Project Factsheet". De Beers Canada. May 28, 2009. http://www.debeerscanada.com/files_2/snap_lake/factsheet.html. Retrieved August 13, 2009.
- ^ "Snap Lake Mine". DeBeers. http://www.debeerscanada.com/files_3/snap-lake-mine.php.
- ^ "Daily Planet Goes North – More Ice for the Arctic". Discovery Channel. http://broadband.discoverychannel.ca/?vid=20671. Retrieved February 22, 2008.
External links
- "Digging for Diamonds 24/7 Under Frozen Snap Lake", Wired, November 24, 2008
- Photo gallery at De Beers Canada
- Snap Lake project, gallery at Flickr
Categories:- Diamond mines in Canada
- Mines in the Northwest Territories
- Underground mines in Canada
- De Beers
- Mining stubs
- Northwest Territories geography stubs
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