Site overview
Mina Centrală Teliuc was the principal underground and open-pit iron ore mine at Teliucu Inferior in Hunedoara County, western Romania, situated in the Poiana Ruscă Mountains near the city of Hunedoara. The Teliuc–Ghelari district has one of the oldest iron-mining traditions in Romania, with extraction evidenced from the Dacian and Roman periods. Large-scale modern mining at Teliuc expanded rapidly in the 1950s under the Romanian communist state, producing ore for the Hunedoara steel works.
Production peaked in 1980 at over 1.2 million tonnes across the Teliuc and Ghelari operations, but the mine entered decline in the 1980s, with irreversible contraction from the early 1990s. The mines and ore preparation plant at Teliucu Inferior closed definitively in the mid-2000s. The former open-pit quarry of Mina Centrală subsequently flooded from underground springs to form a lake of over ten hectares.
Ruined concrete structures, abandoned mine buildings, and three former tailings ponds remain at the site, with partial ecological remediation works ongoing.
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History
The iron ore deposits of the Poiana Ruscă Mountains at Teliuc and the neighbouring commune of Ghelari are among the most ancient in Romania. Dacian iron extraction in the area predated the Roman conquest, and following the Roman annexation of Dacia in AD 106, the Teliuc district became part of the principal iron-mining region of the province. A Latin inscription discovered at nearby Ghelari — 'Natus ibi ubi ferum nascitum' (Born where iron is born) — attests to the importance of the district. Roman underground galleries at Teliuc included at least three tunnels, the longest approximately eleven metres, excavated with chisels and hammers. Tools and the skeletal remains of a miner buried by a roof collapse were discovered in a Teliuc gallery during nineteenth-century mining works, providing direct evidence of ancient underground extraction. The iron processed at Teliuc in antiquity was transported for working at the major Roman centres of Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa and Apulum.
Iron-working continued through the medieval period, with smelting furnaces and forges operating in and around Teliuc. The Hunedoara region — known historically as Eisenmarkt (Iron Market) — developed its iron-producing centres significantly during the nineteenth century as part of the Austro-Hungarian industrial expansion, with mines at Teliuc and Ghelari supplying ore to new blast furnaces. A narrow-gauge iron-ore railway connecting the Ghelari mines to the Govăjdia smelter was established from the 1860s, and by 1871 a horse-drawn line extended to Govăjdia; a steam-hauled extension to Hunedoara opened in 1900. Iron ore from Teliuc was used to supply the Călan blast furnace built in 1871, to which ore was transported by a 16.5-kilometre narrow-gauge line.
The large-scale modern industrial phase at Mina Centrală Teliuc began in the early 1950s, when a series of geological investigations identified substantial new reserves and the communist regime undertook major investment in iron ore extraction to supply the expanding Hunedoara steel works. By the 1960s the Teliuc and Ghelari operations together produced over 600,000 tonnes of ore annually. To address the low iron content of the ore and improve the concentrate reaching the Hunedoara and Călan furnaces, a large ore preparation plant was constructed near the Teliuc mine; it was commissioned in 1965. A tunnel over six kilometres in length, connecting the Ghelari mine underground workings to Teliuc, was constructed between 1962 and 1966 to facilitate ore transport to the preparation plant. Significant communist-era investment between 1975 and 1985 drove combined output from Teliuc and Ghelari to a record of over 1.2 million tonnes in 1980, the highest in the history of the Poiana Ruscă mining district. During the same period, large numbers of workers were recruited from disadvantaged regions of Romania, particularly from Moldavia, and worker housing blocks and social facilities were built at Teliucu Inferior.
The 1980 production record was accompanied by high operating losses. From the 1980s the mines entered a phase of irreversible decline. Ore grade fell, the preparation plant's throughput and energy efficiency proved inadequate, and extraction depths increased production costs substantially. Activity contracted sharply after 1990, and by the mid-2000s all mining operations at Teliucu Inferior had permanently ceased. The former open-pit quarry of Mina Centrală and the adjacent Mina de Est were progressively flooded by underground springs following closure, forming a mine lake of over ten hectares and depths reported locally at close to sixty metres. Decades of decaying concrete structures, ruined mine buildings, and three abandoned tailings ponds — covering together almost ninety to one hundred hectares — remained at the site. Ecological remediation works for the three tailings ponds were initiated under a Government programme after 2010, though works were suspended for extended periods; as of the mid-2020s only one of the three ponds had been fully remediated.
Timeline
Ore railway and Călan furnace connection established
Communist-era modernisation and expansion
Underground tunnel to Ghelari constructed
Peak production period
Decline in productivity and output
Final closure of Teliuc mines and preparation plant
Former quarry floods to form mine lake
Tailings pond remediation programme initiated
Sources and records
Adevarul.ro: article 'Lacul care înghite o mina de fier, la Hunedoara' (2022)
Adevarul.ro: article 'Priveliştea sumbră a fostelor mine de fier de la Teliuc' (2022)
Adevarul.ro: article 'Cele mai vechi mine de fier din România, exploatate de daci' (2024)
Ziarul Hunedoreanului (zhd.ro): 'Teliucu Inferior – Povestea minelor de fier ale dacilor' (2018)
Arhiva Replicahd.ro: 'Teliuc, capitala romană a fierului'
Adevarul.ro (Moștenirea toxică): tailings ponds remediation programme (2025)
Mindat.org locality record: Teliuc quarry, Teliucu Inferior
Mindat.org locality record: Teliucu Inferior iron deposit
Grokipedia / Wikipedia: Ghelari mine article (includes Teliuc plant and tunnel details)
Wikipedia: Teliucu Inferior commune article
RevistaDeturnatorie blog: review citing Călan furnace and Teliuc ore railway