You probably thought that since most people don't have much mining savvy (you were correct about that), you could just post about uranium mining without context, and you'd get plenty of indignant posts. It turns out that, as usual, you've have to resort to some pretty intense massaging of data -- like leaving out 350/351sts of it.
In the USA, uranium has been
http://www.sea-us.org.au/pdfs/tmw00/TMW00-Oz-USA.pdf">mined with carbonates (like sodium bicarbonate) since 1970; copper leachants are usually acids, and gold leachants are highly corrosive cyanides.
Copper in-situ leaching is BY FAR the largest contributor of radiologically hazardous waste material among ISL-mined metals; and it is subject to much looser standards than anything in or out of a reactor.
The
http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/inf23.html">amount of uranium mined in the USA was 1672 metric tons in 2006; for
http://www.indexmundi.com/en/commodities/minerals/copper/copper_t20.html">copper, 1.2 million metric tons (2006), half of that by leaching. That's a ratio of better than 350:1 (Cu/U),
assuming 100% uranium leaching, and 2006 was the best year for uranium mining in the past decade. But actually,
http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/inf23.html">about one-third of the uranium is mined by ISL, so our Cu/U ratio goes to about 1000:1.
And every gram of copper leached produces TENORM -- Technologically-Enhanced Naturally-Occurring Radioactive Material:
http://www.epa.gov/rpdweb00/tenorm/copper.html">Copper Mining and Production Wastes
http://www.epa.gov/rpdweb00/docs/tenorm/402-r-99-002.pdf">TENORM in the Southwestern Copper Belt of Arizona (PDF)
http://www.epa.gov/rpdweb00/tenorm/sources.html">Sources of TENORM (Uranium mining isn't the worst by far, though copper mining produces less ambient radiation per gram.)
A huge amount of TENORM is produced incidentally to mining, fossil fuel use, agriculture, and even water processing in just the USA. In fact, there are hundreds of papers proposing that TENORM be "mined" for its radionuclide content.
You know, I'm the first one to admit that my command of math isn't stellar. If I have misplaced a jot or a tittle, I'm sure to hear about it. In fact, I would
want to hear about it. But the copper mining industry is so enormously bigger than the uranium mining industry that to focus on uranium as The Problem is absurd. I've read dozens of hand-wringing articles here about uranium mining, but I think I've seen maybe ONE about in-situ leach gold mining, and one or two about copper mining, in general. A 350:1 or 1000:1 copper-to-uranium production ratio, but a reversed outrage ratio.
Nor can you claim that uranium is a special case because it's radioactive, because copper mining waste is likewise radioactive.
Say, isn't copper used in great quantity in the wind energy industry? (I mean, hundreds of times more of it than is used by a nuclear reactor.)
--d!