Uranium Mining and Milling 

     The earth's crust contains an average of 3 parts per million of Uranium with extremes of 1 to 500,000 parts per million. A number of countries extract the ore through mining. Canada and Australia are the largest suppliers at present, accounting for roughly 50% of the world's production. Typical mining schemes consist of extracting rock (containing Uranium Oxide [U3O8]) from open pits or underground mines. In some cases, the ore is extracted by in-situ leaching. Once an amount of ore has been obtained, it proceeds to the milling process which typically consists of crushing the rock, leaching the crushed rock with acid, and recovering the Uranium Oxide from the liquid. This concentrated Uranium Oxide is referred to as yellowcake.


FAS Resources on Uranium Mining and Milling:

Overview of Uranium Production

Nuclear Forces Guide

Migration of Radioisotopes in the Earth's Crust

Additional Resources:

Uranium Mining and Exploration Companies

U.S Department of Energy, Nuclear Power Generation and Fuel Cycle Report, 1997, Energy Information Administration Report DOE/EIA-0436(97). Washington, DC: US DOE, 1997.

Uranium Information Center, Geology of Uranium Deposits, Nuclear Issues Briefing Report No. 34. Melbourne, Australia: UIC, 2001.

Home > Programs > Strategic Security > Nuclear Information Project > Nuclear Power and Fuel Cycle