Site overview
Lahnaslammen kaivos was an open-cast talc-magnesite mine at Sotkamo in the Kainuu region of Finland, operated from 1968 until October 2010. The talc-magnesite deposit was identified in the late 1940s, with deep drilling by Suomen Malmi commencing in 1956 and test beneficiation in 1957. Commercial production began in 1968 under Suomen Talkki Oy, founded in 1967 to commercialise a Finnish flotation separation process.
Over its operational life the pit reached a depth of 185 metres and yielded nearly 18 million tonnes of ore, producing approximately 7 million tonnes of talc concentrate and over 100,000 tonnes of nickel concentrate. The principal product served as a filler in printing and fine papers. After closure the pit was designated for progressive backfilling using waste rock from the adjacent Punasuon kaivos, with the upper portion expected to fill with water and form a lake over a period of approximately 25 years.
Map
History
The talc-magnesite deposit at Lahnaslampi, situated south of Nuasjärvi in the municipality of Sotkamo, Kainuu, was identified in the late 1940s. Suomen Malmi undertook deep diamond-drilling at the site in 1956 and conducted test beneficiation in 1957. Preliminary batches of Lahnaslampi talc were delivered to the Kajaani paper mill in 1961, demonstrating the suitability of the product for the paper industry.
Commercial open-cast mining began in 1968 under the operating company Suomen Talkki Oy, which had been founded in Finland in 1967 specifically to exploit a newly developed flotation process for separating magnesite from talc ore. The principal product was talc concentrate used primarily as a filler in printing and fine papers; nickel concentrate was recovered as a by-product. A processing plant was constructed on site to enrich the ore.
Ownership passed through successive changes: in 1984 the business continued under Finnminerals Oy; the operating name became Mondo Minerals in 1998 and subsequently Mondo Minerals B.V. Branch Finland in 2007; and in 2018 the talc business was acquired by Elementis. Throughout these changes the Sotkamo operations remained centred on the Lahnaslampi pit and its associated processing plant.
Over the mine's operational life of more than forty years, the open-cast pit reached a depth of 185 metres. Total ore extracted was close to 18 million tonnes, from which approximately 7 million tonnes of talc and more than 100,000 tonnes of nickel concentrate were recovered. The talc was used at paper mills in Kajaani, Jämsänkoski, and Simpele.
Extraction at Lahnaslammen kaivos ended in October 2010. The increasing depth of the pit had made continued mining progressively more difficult and costly. From that date, the adjacent Punasuon kaivos, opened in 2010, took over as the primary raw material source for the Sotkamo processing plant. Following closure, the Lahnaslampi pit was designated for progressive infilling over a period of approximately 25 years using waste rock from Punasuon kaivos and magnesite sand generated during processing. The uppermost section of the pit is expected eventually to fill with water, creating a new lake on the former mining footprint.
Timeline
Drilling and test beneficiation
First test deliveries of talc
Suomen Talkki Oy founded
Open-cast talc mining
Ownership transfer to Finnminerals Oy
Renaming as Mondo Minerals
Cessation of extraction
Progressive pit infilling
Sources and records
Yle news report: Mondo Minerals avasi uuden kaivoksen Sotkamossa (April 2012)
Yle news article: Sotkamon, Outokummun ja Polvijärven talkkikaivoksilla on uusi omistaja (June 2025)
Elementis Finland website: company history and operations
Kaivosvastuu reporting: 2021 Elementis; 2024 Mondo Minerals
English Wikipedia article: Mondo Minerals
GTK Spinelli mineral samples database: Talkki, Lahnaslammen kaivos
Unionpedia article: Lahnaslammen kaivos