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Political Opportunity and Public Participation: EIA in Northern Canada and South AfricaBoyco, Morgan Walter 24 January 2011 (has links)
This research critically examines the process of public participation in the politically contested arena of environmental impact assessment (EIA) in two case studies: the Ekati diamond mine in Canada’s Northwest Territories and the Richards Bay Minerals project in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Each case offers the chance to examine and compare the potentialities of expanded public participation in EIA and the promise of deliberative environmental decision-making. The concept of deliberative public participation has become the new normative standard for citizen engagement in numerous planning and policy-making processes, including EIA. It calls for increased participation by previously disadvantaged communities in the decisions that affect them through multi-stakeholder dialogue. Addressing the need for a realistic assessment of deliberative democratic practice, this study explores the limits of deliberative process by looking at specific examples of EIA, bringing into focus political processes, power relations and the structural conditions affecting citizen engagement.
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Richards Bay zircon.Pietersen, Kevin John. January 1992 (has links)
Zircon from the zircon concentrate of Richards Bay Minerals was investigated with a view
to understanding the morphology and provenance. The obsevations were applied to the reduction of
uranium, thorium and other trace elements in the heavy mineral placer deposits. It is evident from
differences in morphology, optical characteristics, cathodoluminescence, inclusion types and trace
element analyses that the zircon is derived from numerous parent rocks. Rare earth element
modelling reveals several possible parent rocks including rhyolites, granites, syenites, pegmatites and
carbonatites.
Fission track U mapping of individual zircons indicated an enrichment of U in the rims and
grain terminations. The U maps were used to devise and test several methods, including abrasion and
partial dissolution, to reduce the combined U and Th concentration from 450-563ppm to below
400ppm. The effect of magnetic cleaning, density separation and size classification of the zircon
concentrate on the U +Th concentration was found to be negligible. Air abrasion and HF acid
dissolution successfully reduced the U +Th concentrations to between 332 and 383ppm.
The contribution of trace elements from inclusions, surface pit fillings and coatings, and
foreign minerals within the zircon concentrate were evaluated by by scanning electron microscope
identification. / Thesis (M.Sc.)-University of Natal, Durban, 1992.
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