From curiosity to impact: women driving science forward at Nuton
February 11, 2026
In celebration of International Day of Women and Girls in Science, Nuton proudly recognizes the women driving our innovation forward while inspiring the next generation to explore opportunities in STEM. Meet Abigail and Casandra, two University of Arizona alumnae engineers helping define sustainability at Nuton.

Women in STEM: engineering careers in sustainable mining
Abigail and Casandra are engineers, both hailing from the University of Arizona and both part of the Nuton Graduate Program. Their careers began in the mining industry during a pivotal shift toward green technology. Abigail and Casandra are currently on the ground at Johnson Camp Mine, Nuton’s first industrial-scale deployment, turning the goal of sustainable copper leaching into a daily reality.

Abigail Haan
Chemical Engineering
Focuses on microbial growth, cell counts and reactor maintenance.

Casandra Gamez Gonzales
Mining & Geological Engineering
Focuses on construction oversight and technical guidance for the Nuton Pad.
Unearthing the world of mining
Both engineers launched their careers with the same fundamental curiosity: What turns a rock into the metal our world depends on?
Abigail, a Chemical Engineering graduate from Orange County, California, found her answer during a mining internship last summer. “I loved seeing all of the heavy equipment on site and learning about the variety of chemical processes it takes to go from rocks to pure copper,” she says. That initial spark led to a career search for a program that offered breadth and depth, which brought her to Nuton.
Casandra is a Mining and Geological Engineering graduate born and raised in Phoenix. She discovered her passion for mining during a tour of the San Xavier Research Laboratory. Later, she was inspired by her senior design project, in which she led mining engineers to develop a drill-and-blast pattern for an underground panel caving excavation. This experience ignited a drive to work with a company that values innovation, growth, and culture.
Why Nuton?
The mining industry has previously been defined by tradition; however, Rio Tinto’s Graduate program offers a fresh perspective, and at Nuton, roles stand out as a departure from traditional mining roles. Abigail and Casandra sought out this rotational structure, allowing early-career engineers to experience a variety of the business’s facets, providing perspective not only on the “how” but also on the “why.”
For Abigail, Nuton was appealing because it offered the opportunity to see the entire ecosystem of an industrial plant.
“It was exactly what I was looking for during my job search: a rotational program to get exposure to a variety of positions within an industrial plant.”
Abigail Haan

Casandra’s path was guided by a desire to align her technical skills with her personal values. Nuton provided that with its innovative goal of sustainability in mining.

“I wanted to be part of a team that focused on developing safe operational and processing practices to reduce environmental and social impacts.”
Cassandra Gamez Gonzales
“Farming” microbes: A day in the life at Johnson Camp Mine
At Nuton’s Johnson Camp Mine, Nuton´s first industrial-scale deployment, high-level engineering meets real-world application. Every day, Abigail and Casandra observe groundbreaking ideas as they work directly with sustainable, state-of-the-art technology.
Abigail’s day-to-day involves maintaining microbial growth. Her core goal is “farming” microbes, regulating metabolic health and growth rates to drive the biomining process. She understands microbes at a cellular level. But it doesn’t stop there. “Outside of that, I try to get in the field as much as possible to understand what different teams are working on and get exposure to other parts of the process.” Learning something new is a crucial part of every day.
Casandra splits her time between two sectors of the mine. Part of her time is dedicated to learning modeling, project benchmarking, and designing equipment improvements. As an engineering project manager, Casandra has cultivated a passion for the process and operations side of Nuton. The rest of her time is invested in that passion, in the field overseeing and providing technical guidance on the construction, engineering, and commissioning of vital plant components.

Challenging the status quo: STEM careers in copper
Abigail and Casandra’s budding careers represent a vital shift in the mining landscape. Their work bridges the gap between classroom theory and industrial-scale application, and these graduates are at the forefront of Nuton’s mission to redefine how the world sources copper. For Casandra, reshaping the mining industry begins with healthy skepticism and a refusal to accept “the way it’s always been” as the gold standard. “Innovation comes from those who question the conventional,” she says, emphasizing that a more sustainable and efficient future is only possible when we dare to disrupt.
Their careers serve as a blueprint for the next generation of talent, creating space for young women and girls to follow in their footsteps and showing that meaningful change often begins with challenging long-standing industry norms.