Mid-tier gold producer Evolution Mining rolls out senceive wireless monitoring platform at its Mt Carlton site to deliver live reporting to supervisors and control teams.

Mt Carlton is located 150km south of Townsville, Queensland. Operating a 500-metre by 400-metre pit and a 600-metre by 600-metre tailings dam, the company opted to introduce advanced deformation monitoring technology to deliver real-time status updates and alerts to its team.
Evolution opted for Senceive’s GeoWAN solution, a long-range transmission system capable of covering areas up to 15-kilometers. It incorporates several sensors placed along the tailings dam and/or pit walls to measure for minute movements in the surface. The sensors are wirelessly connected to a solar-powered gateway, positioned near to the pit, where data is transferred live to the web-based monitoring software.
Depending on the application, different sensors can be used in combination to deliver accurate geotechnical measurements, including tilt, pressure, vibration, temperature or optical displacement.
The setup at Mt Carlton
At Mt Carlton, Evolution Mining has more than 20 triaxial tilt sensors positioned around the tailings dam to measure for any movement. The team is also rolling out live monitoring of piezometers that measure changes moisture levels within the tailings dam walls.
In the open pit, there are numerous sensors monitoring pit walls, waste backfill and survey pillar movement.
Senior Mine Surveyor for the company, Callum McNaughton, said the solution has enabled his small team to provide accurate, viable monitoring data to the departments that need it. He said:
“The wireless monitoring platform has been perfect for us. It dramatically reduces the need for us to manually survey these areas, saving us time and increasing safety by removing surveyors walking these areas on foot.”
One of the key advantages, Mr McNaughton explains, is the ability to set different tolerances and time triggers for each sensor and/or area. He said:
“In the tailings dam we have a slightly higher tolerance before any alerts are triggered, because you do get some movement in the dam and swelling from rain. Inside the pit and in one area where there is a crack in the wall, the tolerance is much tighter and the sensors are triggered more frequently. The sensors are also firing measurements every 10 minutes in the pit, whereas they monitor every half an hour on the tailings dam.”
Team collaboration