The University of Witwatersrand held its first-ever Wits Hackathon in 2022. Students had less than 24 hours to find a solution to a serious mining problem.
Most of the data pertaining to South Africa’s mining industry are still in paper format. The last survey dates back to the 1980s.
The students were presented with a broad statement – Digitalisation in Mining – and had to find a working solution to transform the mining industry.
I invited Taryn Michael, a member of the winning team, to join me on The Citizen’s Tech Check podcast.
The judge’s panel consisted of:
The winning team comprised of Wits students in computer science and mathematics: Taryn Michael, Eli Nimy, Mfundo Monchwe, Clarence Mantiya and Kurhula Manganyi.
They presented a solution to digitise mining documents to PDF format using optical character recognition (OCR).
Creative Mines also utilised text analytics to provide insight into mining documents and social media analysis to detect regions of interest in the sector.
Their model also identifies geographic locations with the highest and lowest mining potential, predicts the potential of specific regions and simulates different scenarios of natural resources, environment sensitivity and the availability of water.
Creative Mines walked away with a R15 000 cash prize and NEMISA courses worth R50 000.
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