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    Great Fingall mines again: geotechnical and safety notes for WA gold engineers

    December 11, 2025|

    Reviewed by Joe Ashwell

    Great Fingall mines again: geotechnical and safety notes for WA gold engineers

    First reported on Australian Mining

    30 Second Briefing

    Westgold Resources has restarted mining at the historic Great Fingall gold mine near Cue in Western Australia, firing the first production blast after more than a decade on care and maintenance. The operation targets high-grade underground ore beneath the old Great Fingall open pit, using modern longhole stoping and paste fill to extract remnant pillars and deeper lodes. Geotechnical teams will need to reconcile historic workings, old shaft infrastructure and voids with contemporary ground support, seismic monitoring and water management standards in WA’s Murchison region.

    Technical Brief

    • Historic status implies legacy shafts, old support systems and undocumented voids needing systematic re‑survey and hazard mapping.
    • Reactivation demands updated emergency egress, refuge chambers and ventilation circuits compatible with modern diesel fleets.
    • Water inflows from old workings and pit catchments must be reassessed against contemporary dewatering and discharge standards.
    • Integration of modern ground support, monitoring and paste systems into an old mine layout will drive geotechnical risk controls.
    • Similar brownfield underground restarts increasingly hinge on reconciling heritage voids with current seismic and ground‑control expectations.

    Our Take

    Westgold Resources features only sporadically in our recent Australian coverage compared with larger WA gold producers, so any restart or expansion at Great Fingall signals the company is still actively repositioning its asset base rather than simply harvesting mature mines.

    Within the 570 tag-matched ‘Projects’ and ‘Safety’ pieces, Western Australian operations dominate, and this clustering usually reflects both tighter regulatory scrutiny and a strong safety culture that can lengthen approval timelines but also reduce operational disruption once mines are running.

    Although this piece is tagged for Safety, there are relatively few WA project items in our database that pair Safety with legacy underground assets like Great Fingall, suggesting regulators may pay particular attention to ground control, old workings interaction, and escape/ventilation upgrades during recommissioning.

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    Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.

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