At its core, reclamation is an effort to restore harm done to a mined land’s soil health and prep...
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14 CURRENT | laurel_mire |
June 22, 2022 03:33
| over 2 years ago
At its core, reclamation is an effort to restore harm done to a mined land’s soil health and prepare the land for another use after mining activities cease. Reclamation is ideally a two-part process undertaken from the moment mining activity begins: first minimizing negative environmental effects during mining and, at its conclusion, restoring land to a beneficial end use, such as open land, wildlife habitat, agriculture, residential/commercial use, etc. From a technical perspective, reclamation activities likely include efforts to “clean-up” the damaged landscape such as acid rock drainage management, efforts to control erosion and sedimentation, construction of tailings covers, revegetation, soil decontamination and topsoil replacement, and water treatment. While these technical aspects are needed, there is some research suggesting a more holistic, inclusive approach which aims to reframe reclamation as an “ongoing, creative process of community healing” (Rethinking remediation). See the “Holistic Remediation” section of this wiki for more information and resources. This wiki serves to collect projects, methods, research, and questions related to mine reclamation. Help this resource grow by editing this page here! Visit the mine reclamation tag page to see the latest posts about this topic on Public Lab, and receive updates by following the #mine-reclamation tag: Lead image: "Reclaimed Mine Area_DSC_0168" by Intermountain Region US Forest Service is marked with CC PDM 1.0.
What’s on this page:
Community stories and projectsPublic Lab community projects related to mine reclamation will appear here [nodes:grid:project:mine-reclamation] More stories and projects related to mine reclamation
Questions about mine reclamationQuestions tagged with [questions:mine-reclamation] Methods and activities on monitoring reclamation
Please make sure to monitor at locations that are safe and accessible to the public. Do not trespass on private property!
Photo documentationKinds of data produced: Visual records of observable reclamation permit violations / compliance, or reclamation progress. Examples of permit violations are explained in these posts:
METHODS: Aerial photography and videography[nodes:grid:mine-reclamation-photography] Photography combined with Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) to monitor plant growth over time on reclaimed land
Reviewing public records to detect violationsKinds of data produced: Possible reporting violations by mine operators: missing or unexpected data, repeated limit violations. These can be reported to a state agency (source: Appalachian Water Watch Citizen Monitoring Manual) METHODS: Reviewing Discharge Monitoring Reports (DMRs)
Water quality testingImage: “Acid mine drainage from the Mike Horse Mine complex enters upper Blackfoot River watershed,” Earthworks, CC BY. Kinds of data produced: Measurements of water pH, conductivity, and other parameters. Discharge and runoff from active mining can negatively impact these water quality indicators, while reclamation activities might improve them. Water quality data that you collect can potentially be compared with data reported on Discharge Monitoring Reports (source: Appalachian Water Watch Citizen Monitoring Manual), and compared with relevant regulatory standards. METHODS: Identifying sites for water quality testing
Measuring water pHpH values indicate how acidic (low pH) or alkaline (high pH) the water is. The US EPA sets its freshwater pH standard between 6.5 and 9. Drainage from mines can be acidic or alkaline depending on what minerals the water interacts with as it flows through the mining site. [nodes:grid:mine-water-ph] Note that one study in a Mid-Appalachian watershed found that while other water quality indicators improved after reclamation, pH did not:
Measuring water conductivityWater that has more inorganic solids dissolved in it (like salts, metals, or other chemical pollutants) generally conducts an electrical current better---it has a higher conductivity. Water downstream of mining activity could occasionally have higher conductivity due to dissolved solids from discharges.
Monitoring soil healthKinds of data produced: Measurements of soil pH, heavy metal concentrations, activity of microbial and other biological life, other indicators of soil health. Similar to impacts on water quality, mining activity and reclamation can affect these soil health indicators. METHODS: The soil contamination wiki at https://publiclab.org/wiki/soil is where we’ve collected and organized information on soil contaminants and testing methods. Below are some resources that might be particularly useful in monitoring or evaluating mine reclamation. [nodes:grid:mine-soil-health] ActivitiesActivities tagged with [notes:activity:mine-reclamation] Regulations on mine reclamationUS regulationsDifferent federal agencies are involved in regulating mining activity and reclamation in the US
For examples of how community science can engage with regulatory processes in mining and reclamation, see these posts from the Mountains and the Mines Monitoring Project team @ekpeterman, @jfreemanfilm, @junior_walk1337: Abandoned minesMany mines and surrounding lands that have since been abandoned by mine operators remain inadequately reclaimed. The Bureau of Land Management estimates that there are 100,000 to 500,000 abandoned mines in the western US alone, the location of most unrecorded. This poses massive public health, safety, and environmental hazards (publication about abandoned mine safety in CA). Tailings piles likely contain harmful chemicals which may leach into the soil, groundwater, and surrounding surface water, especially when left unmanaged at an abandoned site (source). The OSMRE runs the Abandoned Mine Land (AML) program to help fund state- and tribe-led reclamation of abandoned coal mines. The Department of the Interior recently extended this program through 2034 (source). Australia
Advocacy[nodes:grid:mine-reclamation-advocacy]
Holistic RemediationMine reclamation is often seen as a bandaid -- an opportunity to fix the damage done to a landscape during the mining process. However, reclamation is a part of the mining process and can itself cause harm by altering the landscape further and ignoring or contributing to past injustices. A holistic approach to reclamation/remediation includes principles such as emphasizing public participation, elevating & addressing environmental justice concerns, and acknowledging a landscape’s “thickness” — the “diversity of past and contemporary values projected onto the landscape, history, meaning, and social interactions with and on the landscape (Rethinking remediation). Below are a few resources shared by holistic mine reclamation scholar Caitlynn Beckett:
Environmental & Health ConcernsThere are numerous environmental concerns related to the mine reclamation process and abandoned mines, including:
The above environmental problems also lead to numerous human health concerns and things to be on the look out for:
Further reading and resources
Wikis related to mine reclamation[wikis:reclamation] Next step challengesAreas for potential further development in tools, resources, and advocacy. Please edit or add to this section so folx can see where they might be able to contribute!
|
Revert | |
13 | laurel_mire |
April 19, 2022 17:26
| over 2 years ago
At its core, reclamation is an effort to restore harm done to a mined land’s soil health and prepare the land for another use after mining activities cease. Reclamation is ideally a two-part process undertaken from the moment mining activity begins: first minimizing negative environmental effects during mining and, at its conclusion, restoring land to a beneficial end use, such as open land, wildlife habitat, agriculture, residential/commercial use, etc. From a technical perspective, reclamation activities likely include efforts to “clean-up” the damaged landscape such as acid rock drainage management, efforts to control erosion and sedimentation, construction of tailings covers, revegetation, soil decontamination and topsoil replacement, and water treatment. While these technical aspects are needed, there is some research suggesting a more holistic, inclusive approach which aims to reframe reclamation as an “ongoing, creative process of community healing” (Rethinking remediation). See the “Holistic Remediation” section of this wiki for more information and resources. This wiki serves to collect projects, methods, research, and questions related to mine reclamation. Help this resource grow by editing this page here! Visit the mine reclamation tag page to see the latest posts about this topic on Public Lab, and receive updates by following the #mine-reclamation tag: Lead image: "Reclaimed Mine Area_DSC_0168" by Intermountain Region US Forest Service is marked with CC PDM 1.0.
What’s on this page:
Community stories and projectsPublic Lab community projects related to mine reclamation will appear here [nodes:grid:project:mine-reclamation] More stories and projects related to mine reclamation
Questions about mine reclamationQuestions tagged with [questions:mine-reclamation] Methods and activities on monitoring reclamation
Please make sure to monitor at locations that are safe and accessible to the public. Do not trespass on private property!
Photo documentationKinds of data produced: Visual records of observable reclamation permit violations / compliance, or reclamation progress. Examples of permit violations are explained in these posts:
METHODS: Aerial photography and videography[nodes:grid:mine-reclamation-photography] Photography combined with Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) to monitor plant growth over time on reclaimed land
Reviewing public records to detect violationsKinds of data produced: Possible reporting violations by mine operators: missing or unexpected data, repeated limit violations. These can be reported to a state agency (source: Appalachian Water Watch Citizen Monitoring Manual) METHODS: Reviewing Discharge Monitoring Reports (DMRs)
Water quality testingImage: “Acid mine drainage from the Mike Horse Mine complex enters upper Blackfoot River watershed,” Earthworks, CC BY. Kinds of data produced: Measurements of water pH, conductivity, and other parameters. Discharge and runoff from active mining can negatively impact these water quality indicators, while reclamation activities might improve them. Water quality data that you collect can potentially be compared with data reported on Discharge Monitoring Reports (source: Appalachian Water Watch Citizen Monitoring Manual), and compared with relevant regulatory standards. METHODS: Identifying sites for water quality testing
Measuring water pHpH values indicate how acidic (low pH) or alkaline (high pH) the water is. The US EPA sets its freshwater pH standard between 6.5 and 9. Drainage from mines can be acidic or alkaline depending on what minerals the water interacts with as it flows through the mining site. [nodes:grid:mine-water-ph] Note that one study in a Mid-Appalachian watershed found that while other water quality indicators improved after reclamation, pH did not:
Measuring water conductivityWater that has more inorganic solids dissolved in it (like salts, metals, or other chemical pollutants) generally conducts an electrical current better---it has a higher conductivity. Water downstream of mining activity could occasionally have higher conductivity due to dissolved solids from discharges.
Monitoring soil healthKinds of data produced: Measurements of soil pH, heavy metal concentrations, activity of microbial and other biological life, other indicators of soil health. Similar to impacts on water quality, mining activity and reclamation can affect these soil health indicators. METHODS: The soil contamination wiki at https://publiclab.org/wiki/soil is where we’ve collected and organized information on soil contaminants and testing methods. Below are some resources that might be particularly useful in monitoring or evaluating mine reclamation. [nodes:grid:mine-soil-health] ActivitiesActivities tagged with [notes:activity:mine-reclamation] Regulations on mine reclamationUS regulationsDifferent federal agencies are involved in regulating mining activity and reclamation in the US
For examples of how community science can engage with regulatory processes in mining and reclamation, see these posts from the Mountains and the Mines Monitoring Project team @ekpeterman, @jfreemanfilm, @junior_walk1337: Abandoned minesMany mines and surrounding lands that have since been abandoned by mine operators remain inadequately reclaimed. The Bureau of Land Management estimates that there are 100,000 to 500,000 abandoned mines in the western US alone, the location of most unrecorded. This poses massive public health, safety, and environmental hazards (publication about abandoned mine safety in CA). Tailings piles likely contain harmful chemicals which may leach into the soil, groundwater, and surrounding surface water, especially when left unmanaged at an abandoned site (source). The OSMRE runs the Abandoned Mine Land (AML) program to help fund state- and tribe-led reclamation of abandoned coal mines. The Department of the Interior recently extended this program through 2034 (source). Australia
Advocacy[nodes:grid:mine-reclamation-advocacy]
Holistic RemediationMine reclamation is often seen as a bandaid -- an opportunity to fix the damage done to a landscape during the mining process. However, reclamation is a part of the mining process and can itself cause harm by altering the landscape further and ignoring or contributing to past injustices. A holistic approach to reclamation/remediation includes principles such as emphasizing public participation, elevating & addressing environmental justice concerns, and acknowledging a landscape’s “thickness” — the “diversity of past and contemporary values projected onto the landscape, history, meaning, and social interactions with and on the landscape (Rethinking remediation). Below are a few resources shared by holistic mine reclamation scholar Caitlynn Beckett:
Environmental & Health ConcernsThere are numerous environmental concerns related to the mine reclamation process and abandoned mines, including:
The above environmental problems also lead to numerous human health concerns and things to be on the look out for:
Further reading and resources
Wikis related to mine reclamation[wikis:reclamation] Next step challengesAreas for potential further development in tools, resources, and advocacy. Please edit or add to this section so folx can see where they might be able to contribute!
|
Revert | |
12 | laurel_mire |
April 19, 2022 17:26
| over 2 years ago
At its core, reclamation is an effort to restore harm done to a mined land’s soil health and prepare the land for another use after mining activities cease. Reclamation is ideally a two-part process undertaken from the moment mining activity begins: first minimizing negative environmental effects during mining and, at its conclusion, restoring land to a beneficial end use, such as open land, wildlife habitat, agriculture, residential/commercial use, etc. From a technical perspective, reclamation activities likely include efforts to “clean-up” the damaged landscape such as acid rock drainage management, efforts to control erosion and sedimentation, construction of tailings covers, revegetation, soil decontamination and topsoil replacement, and water treatment. While these technical aspects are needed, there is some research suggesting a more holistic, inclusive approach which aims to reframe reclamation as an “ongoing, creative process of community healing” (Rethinking remediation). See the “Holistic Remediation” section of this wiki for more information and resources. This wiki serves to collect projects, methods, research, and questions related to mine reclamation. Help this resource grow by editing this page here! Visit the mine reclamation tag page to see the latest posts about this topic on Public Lab, and receive updates by following the #mine-reclamation tag: Lead image: "Reclaimed Mine Area_DSC_0168" by Intermountain Region US Forest Service is marked with CC PDM 1.0.
What’s on this page:
Community stories and projectsPublic Lab community projects related to mine reclamation will appear here [nodes:grid:project:mine-reclamation] More stories and projects related to mine reclamation
Questions about mine reclamationQuestions tagged with [questions:mine-reclamation] Methods and activities on monitoring reclamation
Please make sure to monitor at locations that are safe and accessible to the public. Do not trespass on private property!
Photo documentationKinds of data produced: Visual records of observable reclamation permit violations / compliance, or reclamation progress. Examples of permit violations are explained in these posts:
METHODS: Aerial photography and videography[nodes:grid:mine-reclamation-photography] Photography combined with Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) to monitor plant growth over time on reclaimed land
Reviewing public records to detect violationsKinds of data produced: Possible reporting violations by mine operators: missing or unexpected data, repeated limit violations. These can be reported to a state agency (source: Appalachian Water Watch Citizen Monitoring Manual) METHODS: Reviewing Discharge Monitoring Reports (DMRs)
Water quality testingImage: “Acid mine drainage from the Mike Horse Mine complex enters upper Blackfoot River watershed,” Earthworks, CC BY. Kinds of data produced: Measurements of water pH, conductivity, and other parameters. Discharge and runoff from active mining can negatively impact these water quality indicators, while reclamation activities might improve them. Water quality data that you collect can potentially be compared with data reported on Discharge Monitoring Reports (source: Appalachian Water Watch Citizen Monitoring Manual), and compared with relevant regulatory standards. METHODS: Identifying sites for water quality testing
Measuring water pHpH values indicate how acidic (low pH) or alkaline (high pH) the water is. The US EPA sets its freshwater pH standard between 6.5 and 9. Drainage from mines can be acidic or alkaline depending on what minerals the water interacts with as it flows through the mining site. [nodes:grid:mine-water-ph] Note that one study in a Mid-Appalachian watershed found that while other water quality indicators improved after reclamation, pH did not:
Measuring water conductivityWater that has more inorganic solids dissolved in it (like salts, metals, or other chemical pollutants) generally conducts an electrical current better---it has a higher conductivity. Water downstream of mining activity could occasionally have higher conductivity due to dissolved solids from discharges.
Monitoring soil healthKinds of data produced: Measurements of soil pH, heavy metal concentrations, activity of microbial and other biological life, other indicators of soil health. Similar to impacts on water quality, mining activity and reclamation can affect these soil health indicators. METHODS: The soil contamination wiki at https://publiclab.org/wiki/soil is where we’ve collected and organized information on soil contaminants and testing methods. Below are some resources that might be particularly useful in monitoring or evaluating mine reclamation. [nodes:grid:mine-soil-health] ActivitiesActivities tagged with [notes:activity:mine-reclamation] Regulations on mine reclamationUS regulationsDifferent federal agencies are involved in regulating mining activity and reclamation in the US
For examples of how community science can engage with regulatory processes in mining and reclamation, see these posts from the Mountains and the Mines Monitoring Project team @ekpeterman, @jfreemanfilm, @junior_walk1337: Abandoned minesMany mines and surrounding lands that have since been abandoned by mine operators remain inadequately reclaimed. The Bureau of Land Management estimates that there are 100,000 to 500,000 abandoned mines in the western US alone, the location of most unrecorded. This poses massive public health, safety, and environmental hazards (publication about abandoned mine safety in CA). Tailings piles likely contain harmful chemicals which may leach into the soil, groundwater, and surrounding surface water, especially when left unmanaged at an abandoned site (source). The OSMRE runs the Abandoned Mine Land (AML) program to help fund state- and tribe-led reclamation of abandoned coal mines. The Department of the Interior recently extended this program through 2034 (source). Australia
Advocacy[nodes:grid:mine-reclamation-advocacy]
Holistic RemediationMine reclamation is often seen as a bandaid -- an opportunity to fix the damage done to a landscape during the mining process. However, reclamation is a part of the mining process and can itself cause harm by altering the landscape further and ignoring or contributing to past injustices. A holistic approach to reclamation/remediation includes principles such as emphasizing public participation, elevating & addressing environmental justice concerns, and acknowledging a landscape’s “thickness” — the “diversity of past and contemporary values projected onto the landscape, history, meaning, and social interactions with and on the landscape (Rethinking remediation). Below are a few resources shared by holistic mine reclamation scholar Caitlynn Beckett: + The Social Aspects of Mine Closure Research Consortium - research group out of Queensland, Australia developing solutions to the sustainability challenges of the mining industry. + Advocacy work pertaining to the Giant Mine in Canada + Unearthing Justice – a book on protecting your local community from the mining industry + Post-Industrial Landscape Scars – a book on the budding research area of “industrial heritage” + The River Is in Us - a book about how an indigenous Mohawk community in New York state fought back against contamination of its lands + Violence on the Land, Violence on Our Bodies: Building an Indigenous Response to Environmental Violence - a toolkit produced from an initiative shared by the Women’s Earth Alliance and Native Sexual Health Network to document ways the North American indigenous women’s safety and health are impacted by extractive industries and support resistance to environmental violence Environmental & Health ConcernsThere are numerous environmental concerns related to the mine reclamation process and abandoned mines, including:
The above environmental problems also lead to numerous human health concerns and things to be on the look out for:
Further reading and resources
Wikis related to mine reclamation[wikis:reclamation] Next step challengesAreas for potential further development in tools, resources, and advocacy. Please edit or add to this section so folx can see where they might be able to contribute!
|
Revert | |
11 | laurel_mire |
April 19, 2022 17:25
| over 2 years ago
At its core, reclamation is an effort to restore harm done to a mined land’s soil health and prepare the land for another use after mining activities cease. Reclamation is ideally a two-part process undertaken from the moment mining activity begins: first minimizing negative environmental effects during mining and, at its conclusion, restoring land to a beneficial end use, such as open land, wildlife habitat, agriculture, residential/commercial use, etc. From a technical perspective, reclamation activities likely include efforts to “clean-up” the damaged landscape such as acid rock drainage management, efforts to control erosion and sedimentation, construction of tailings covers, revegetation, soil decontamination and topsoil replacement, and water treatment. While these technical aspects are needed, there is some research suggesting a more holistic, inclusive approach which aims to reframe reclamation as an “ongoing, creative process of community healing” (Rethinking remediation). See the “Holistic Remediation” section of this wiki for more information and resources. This wiki serves to collect projects, methods, research, and questions related to mine reclamation. Help this resource grow by editing this page here! Visit the mine reclamation tag page to see the latest posts about this topic on Public Lab, and receive updates by following the #mine-reclamation tag: Lead image: "Reclaimed Mine Area_DSC_0168" by Intermountain Region US Forest Service is marked with CC PDM 1.0.
What’s on this page:
Community stories and projectsPublic Lab community projects related to mine reclamation will appear here [nodes:grid:project:mine-reclamation] More stories and projects related to mine reclamation
Questions about mine reclamationQuestions tagged with [questions:mine-reclamation] Methods and activities on monitoring reclamation
Please make sure to monitor at locations that are safe and accessible to the public. Do not trespass on private property!
Photo documentationKinds of data produced: Visual records of observable reclamation permit violations / compliance, or reclamation progress. Examples of permit violations are explained in these posts:
METHODS: Aerial photography and videography[nodes:grid:mine-reclamation-photography] Photography combined with Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) to monitor plant growth over time on reclaimed land
Reviewing public records to detect violationsKinds of data produced: Possible reporting violations by mine operators: missing or unexpected data, repeated limit violations. These can be reported to a state agency (source: Appalachian Water Watch Citizen Monitoring Manual) METHODS: Reviewing Discharge Monitoring Reports (DMRs)
Water quality testingImage: “Acid mine drainage from the Mike Horse Mine complex enters upper Blackfoot River watershed,” Earthworks, CC BY. Kinds of data produced: Measurements of water pH, conductivity, and other parameters. Discharge and runoff from active mining can negatively impact these water quality indicators, while reclamation activities might improve them. Water quality data that you collect can potentially be compared with data reported on Discharge Monitoring Reports (source: Appalachian Water Watch Citizen Monitoring Manual), and compared with relevant regulatory standards. METHODS: Identifying sites for water quality testing
Measuring water pHpH values indicate how acidic (low pH) or alkaline (high pH) the water is. The US EPA sets its freshwater pH standard between 6.5 and 9. Drainage from mines can be acidic or alkaline depending on what minerals the water interacts with as it flows through the mining site. [nodes:grid:mine-water-ph] Note that one study in a Mid-Appalachian watershed found that while other water quality indicators improved after reclamation, pH did not:
Measuring water conductivityWater that has more inorganic solids dissolved in it (like salts, metals, or other chemical pollutants) generally conducts an electrical current better---it has a higher conductivity. Water downstream of mining activity could occasionally have higher conductivity due to dissolved solids from discharges.
Monitoring soil healthKinds of data produced: Measurements of soil pH, heavy metal concentrations, activity of microbial and other biological life, other indicators of soil health. Similar to impacts on water quality, mining activity and reclamation can affect these soil health indicators. METHODS: The soil contamination wiki at https://publiclab.org/wiki/soil is where we’ve collected and organized information on soil contaminants and testing methods. Below are some resources that might be particularly useful in monitoring or evaluating mine reclamation. [nodes:grid:mine-soil-health] ActivitiesActivities tagged with [notes:activity:mine-reclamation] Regulations on mine reclamationUS regulationsDifferent federal agencies are involved in regulating mining activity and reclamation in the US
For examples of how community science can engage with regulatory processes in mining and reclamation, see these posts from the Mountains and the Mines Monitoring Project team @ekpeterman, @jfreemanfilm, @junior_walk1337: Abandoned minesMany mines and surrounding lands that have since been abandoned by mine operators remain inadequately reclaimed. The Bureau of Land Management estimates that there are 100,000 to 500,000 abandoned mines in the western US alone, the location of most unrecorded. This poses massive public health, safety, and environmental hazards (publication about abandoned mine safety in CA). Tailings piles likely contain harmful chemicals which may leach into the soil, groundwater, and surrounding surface water, especially when left unmanaged at an abandoned site (source). The OSMRE runs the Abandoned Mine Land (AML) program to help fund state- and tribe-led reclamation of abandoned coal mines. The Department of the Interior recently extended this program through 2034 (source). Australia
Advocacy[nodes:grid:mine-reclamation-advocacy]
Holistic RemediationMine reclamation is often seen as a bandaid -- an opportunity to fix the damage done to a landscape during the mining process. However, reclamation is a part of the mining process and can itself cause harm by altering the landscape further and ignoring or contributing to past injustices. A holistic approach to reclamation/remediation includes principles such as emphasizing public participation, elevating & addressing environmental justice concerns, and acknowledging a landscape’s “thickness” — the “diversity of past and contemporary values projected onto the landscape, history, meaning, and social interactions with and on the landscape (Rethinking remediation). Below are a few resources shared by holistic mine reclamation scholar Caitlynn Beckett: + The Social Aspects of Mine Closure Research Consortium - research group out of Queensland, Australia developing solutions to the sustainability challenges of the mining industry. + Advocacy work pertaining to the Giant Mine in Canada + Unearthing Justice – a book on protecting your local community from the mining industry + Post-Industrial Landscape Scars – a book on the budding research area of “industrial heritage” + The River Is in Us - a book about how an indigenous Mohawk community in New York state fought back against contamination of its lands + Violence on the Land, Violence on Our Bodies: Building an Indigenous Response to Environmental Violence - a toolkit produced from an initiative shared by the Women’s Earth Alliance and Native Sexual Health Network to document ways the North American indigenous women’s safety and health are impacted by extractive industries and support resistance to environmental violence Environmental & Health ConcernsThere are numerous environmental concerns related to the mine reclamation process and abandoned mines, including:
The above environmental problems also lead to numerous human health concerns and things to be on the look out for:
Further reading and resources
Wikis related to mine reclamation[wikis:reclamation] Next step challengesAreas for potential further development in tools, resources, and advocacy. Please edit or add to this section so folx can see where they might be able to contribute!
|
Revert | |
10 | laurel_mire |
April 19, 2022 17:24
| over 2 years ago
At its core, reclamation is an effort to restore harm done to a mined land’s soil health and prepare the land for another use after mining activities cease. Reclamation is ideally a two-part process undertaken from the moment mining activity begins: first minimizing negative environmental effects during mining and, at its conclusion, restoring land to a beneficial end use, such as open land, wildlife habitat, agriculture, residential/commercial use, etc. From a technical perspective, reclamation activities likely include efforts to “clean-up” the damaged landscape such as acid rock drainage management, efforts to control erosion and sedimentation, construction of tailings covers, revegetation, soil decontamination and topsoil replacement, and water treatment. While these technical aspects are needed, there is some research suggesting a more holistic, inclusive approach which aims to reframe reclamation as an “ongoing, creative process of community healing” (Rethinking remediation). See the “Holistic Remediation” section of this wiki for more information and resources. This wiki serves to collect projects, methods, research, and questions related to mine reclamation. Help this resource grow by editing this page here! Visit the mine reclamation tag page to see the latest posts about this topic on Public Lab, and receive updates by following the #mine-reclamation tag: Lead image: "Reclaimed Mine Area_DSC_0168" by Intermountain Region US Forest Service is marked with CC PDM 1.0.
What’s on this page:
Community stories and projectsPublic Lab community projects related to mine reclamation will appear here [nodes:grid:project:mine-reclamation] More stories and projects related to mine reclamation
Questions about mine reclamationQuestions tagged with [questions:mine-reclamation] Methods and activities on monitoring reclamation
Please make sure to monitor at locations that are safe and accessible to the public. Do not trespass on private property!
Photo documentationKinds of data produced: Visual records of observable reclamation permit violations / compliance, or reclamation progress. Examples of permit violations are explained in these posts:
METHODS: Aerial photography and videography[nodes:grid:mine-reclamation-photography] Photography combined with Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) to monitor plant growth over time on reclaimed land
Reviewing public records to detect violationsKinds of data produced: Possible reporting violations by mine operators: missing or unexpected data, repeated limit violations. These can be reported to a state agency (source: Appalachian Water Watch Citizen Monitoring Manual) METHODS: Reviewing Discharge Monitoring Reports (DMRs)
Water quality testingImage: “Acid mine drainage from the Mike Horse Mine complex enters upper Blackfoot River watershed,” Earthworks, CC BY. Kinds of data produced: Measurements of water pH, conductivity, and other parameters. Discharge and runoff from active mining can negatively impact these water quality indicators, while reclamation activities might improve them. Water quality data that you collect can potentially be compared with data reported on Discharge Monitoring Reports (source: Appalachian Water Watch Citizen Monitoring Manual), and compared with relevant regulatory standards. METHODS: Identifying sites for water quality testing
Measuring water pHpH values indicate how acidic (low pH) or alkaline (high pH) the water is. The US EPA sets its freshwater pH standard between 6.5 and 9. Drainage from mines can be acidic or alkaline depending on what minerals the water interacts with as it flows through the mining site. [nodes:grid:mine-water-ph] Note that one study in a Mid-Appalachian watershed found that while other water quality indicators improved after reclamation, pH did not:
Measuring water conductivityWater that has more inorganic solids dissolved in it (like salts, metals, or other chemical pollutants) generally conducts an electrical current better---it has a higher conductivity. Water downstream of mining activity could occasionally have higher conductivity due to dissolved solids from discharges.
Monitoring soil healthKinds of data produced: Measurements of soil pH, heavy metal concentrations, activity of microbial and other biological life, other indicators of soil health. Similar to impacts on water quality, mining activity and reclamation can affect these soil health indicators. METHODS: The soil contamination wiki at https://publiclab.org/wiki/soil is where we’ve collected and organized information on soil contaminants and testing methods. Below are some resources that might be particularly useful in monitoring or evaluating mine reclamation. [nodes:grid:mine-soil-health] ActivitiesActivities tagged with [notes:activity:mine-reclamation] Regulations on mine reclamationUS regulationsDifferent federal agencies are involved in regulating mining activity and reclamation in the US
For examples of how community science can engage with regulatory processes in mining and reclamation, see these posts from the Mountains and the Mines Monitoring Project team @ekpeterman, @jfreemanfilm, @junior_walk1337: Abandoned minesMany mines and surrounding lands that have since been abandoned by mine operators remain inadequately reclaimed. The Bureau of Land Management estimates that there are 100,000 to 500,000 abandoned mines in the western US alone, the location of most unrecorded. This poses massive public health, safety, and environmental hazards (publication about abandoned mine safety in CA). Tailings piles likely contain harmful chemicals which may leach into the soil, groundwater, and surrounding surface water, especially when left unmanaged at an abandoned site (source). The OSMRE runs the Abandoned Mine Land (AML) program to help fund state- and tribe-led reclamation of abandoned coal mines. The Department of the Interior recently extended this program through 2034 (source). Australia
Advocacy[nodes:grid:mine-reclamation-advocacy]
Holistic RemediationMine reclamation is often seen as a bandaid -- an opportunity to fix the damage done to a landscape during the mining process. However, reclamation is a part of the mining process and can itself cause harm by altering the landscape further and ignoring or contributing to past injustices. A holistic approach to reclamation/remediation includes principles such as emphasizing public participation, elevating & addressing environmental justice concerns, and acknowledging a landscape’s “thickness” — the “diversity of past and contemporary values projected onto the landscape, history, meaning, and social interactions with and on the landscape (Rethinking remediation). Below are a few resources shared by holistic mine reclamation scholar Caitlynn Beckett: + The Social Aspects of Mine Closure Research Consortium - research group out of Queensland, Australia developing solutions to the sustainability challenges of the mining industry. + Advocacy work pertaining to the Giant Mine in Canada + Unearthing Justice – a book on protecting your local community from the mining industry + Post-Industrial Landscape Scars – a book on the budding research area of “industrial heritage” + The River Is in Us - a book about how an indigenous Mohawk community in New York state fought back against contamination of its lands + Violence on the Land, Violence on Our Bodies: Building an Indigenous Response to Environmental Violence - a toolkit produced from an initiative shared by the Women’s Earth Alliance and Native Sexual Health Network to document ways the North American indigenous women’s safety and health are impacted by extractive industries and support resistance to environmental violence Environmental & Health ConcernsThere are numerous environmental concerns related to the mine reclamation process and abandoned mines, including:
The above environmental problems also lead to numerous human health concerns and things to be on the look out for:
Further reading and resources
Wikis related to mine reclamation[wikis:reclamation] Next step challengesAreas for potential further development in tools, resources, and advocacy. Please edit or add to this section so folx can see where they might be able to contribute!
|
Revert | |
9 | laurel_mire |
April 19, 2022 17:23
| over 2 years ago
At its core, reclamation is an effort to restore harm done to a mined land’s soil health and prepare the land for another use after mining activities cease. Reclamation is ideally a two-part process undertaken from the moment mining activity begins: first minimizing negative environmental effects during mining and, at its conclusion, restoring land to a beneficial end use, such as open land, wildlife habitat, agriculture, residential/commercial use, etc. From a technical perspective, reclamation activities likely include efforts to “clean-up” the damaged landscape such as acid rock drainage management, efforts to control erosion and sedimentation, construction of tailings covers, revegetation, soil decontamination and topsoil replacement, and water treatment. While these technical aspects are needed, there is some research suggesting a more holistic, inclusive approach which aims to reframe reclamation as an “ongoing, creative process of community healing” (Rethinking remediation). See the “Holistic Remediation” section of this wiki for more information and resources. This wiki serves to collect projects, methods, research, and questions related to mine reclamation. Help this resource grow by editing this page here! Visit the mine reclamation tag page to see the latest posts about this topic on Public Lab, and receive updates by following the #mine-reclamation tag: Lead image: "Reclaimed Mine Area_DSC_0168" by Intermountain Region US Forest Service is marked with CC PDM 1.0.
What’s on this page:
Community stories and projectsPublic Lab community projects related to mine reclamation will appear here [nodes:grid:project:mine-reclamation] More stories and projects related to mine reclamation
Questions about mine reclamationQuestions tagged with [questions:mine-reclamation] Methods and activities on monitoring reclamation
Please make sure to monitor at locations that are safe and accessible to the public. Do not trespass on private property!
Photo documentationKinds of data produced: Visual records of observable reclamation permit violations / compliance, or reclamation progress. Examples of permit violations are explained in these posts:
METHODS: Aerial photography and videography[nodes:grid:mine-reclamation-photography] Photography combined with Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) to monitor plant growth over time on reclaimed land
Reviewing public records to detect violationsKinds of data produced: Possible reporting violations by mine operators: missing or unexpected data, repeated limit violations. These can be reported to a state agency (source: Appalachian Water Watch Citizen Monitoring Manual) METHODS: Reviewing Discharge Monitoring Reports (DMRs)
Water quality testingImage: “Acid mine drainage from the Mike Horse Mine complex enters upper Blackfoot River watershed,” Earthworks, CC BY. Kinds of data produced: Measurements of water pH, conductivity, and other parameters. Discharge and runoff from active mining can negatively impact these water quality indicators, while reclamation activities might improve them. Water quality data that you collect can potentially be compared with data reported on Discharge Monitoring Reports (source: Appalachian Water Watch Citizen Monitoring Manual), and compared with relevant regulatory standards. METHODS: Identifying sites for water quality testing
Measuring water pHpH values indicate how acidic (low pH) or alkaline (high pH) the water is. The US EPA sets its freshwater pH standard between 6.5 and 9. Drainage from mines can be acidic or alkaline depending on what minerals the water interacts with as it flows through the mining site. [nodes:grid:mine-water-ph] Note that one study in a Mid-Appalachian watershed found that while other water quality indicators improved after reclamation, pH did not:
Measuring water conductivityWater that has more inorganic solids dissolved in it (like salts, metals, or other chemical pollutants) generally conducts an electrical current better---it has a higher conductivity. Water downstream of mining activity could occasionally have higher conductivity due to dissolved solids from discharges.
Monitoring soil healthKinds of data produced: Measurements of soil pH, heavy metal concentrations, activity of microbial and other biological life, other indicators of soil health. Similar to impacts on water quality, mining activity and reclamation can affect these soil health indicators. METHODS: The soil contamination wiki at https://publiclab.org/wiki/soil is where we’ve collected and organized information on soil contaminants and testing methods. Below are some resources that might be particularly useful in monitoring or evaluating mine reclamation. [nodes:grid:mine-soil-health] ActivitiesActivities tagged with [notes:activity:mine-reclamation] Regulations on mine reclamationUS regulationsDifferent federal agencies are involved in regulating mining activity and reclamation in the US
For examples of how community science can engage with regulatory processes in mining and reclamation, see these posts from the Mountains and the Mines Monitoring Project team @ekpeterman, @jfreemanfilm, @junior_walk1337: Abandoned minesMany mines and surrounding lands that have since been abandoned by mine operators remain inadequately reclaimed. The Bureau of Land Management estimates that there are 100,000 to 500,000 abandoned mines in the western US alone, the location of most unrecorded. This poses massive public health, safety, and environmental hazards (publication about abandoned mine safety in CA). Tailings piles likely contain harmful chemicals which may leach into the soil, groundwater, and surrounding surface water, especially when left unmanaged at an abandoned site (source). The OSMRE runs the Abandoned Mine Land (AML) program to help fund state- and tribe-led reclamation of abandoned coal mines. The Department of the Interior recently extended this program through 2034 (source). Australia
Advocacy[nodes:grid:mine-reclamation-advocacy]
Holistic RemediationMine reclamation is often seen as a bandaid -- an opportunity to fix the damage done to a landscape during the mining process. However, reclamation is a part of the mining process and can itself cause harm by altering the landscape further and ignoring or contributing to past injustices. A holistic approach to reclamation/remediation includes principles such as emphasizing public participation, elevating & addressing environmental justice concerns, and acknowledging a landscape’s “thickness” — the “diversity of past and contemporary values projected onto the landscape, history, meaning, and social interactions with and on the landscape (Rethinking remediation). Below are a few resources shared by holistic mine reclamation scholar Caitlynn Beckett: + The Social Aspects of Mine Closure Research Consortium - research group out of Queensland, Australia developing solutions to the sustainability challenges of the mining industry. + Advocacy work pertaining to the Giant Mine in Canada + Unearthing Justice – a book on protecting your local community from the mining industry + Post-Industrial Landscape Scars – a book on the budding research area of “industrial heritage” + The River Is in Us - a book about how an indigenous Mohawk community in New York state fought back against contamination of its lands + Violence on the Land, Violence on Our Bodies: Building an Indigenous Response to Environmental Violence - a toolkit produced from an initiative shared by the Women’s Earth Alliance and Native Sexual Health Network to document ways the North American indigenous women’s safety and health are impacted by extractive industries and support resistance to environmental violence Environmental & Health ConcernsThere are numerous environmental concerns related to the mine reclamation process and abandoned mines, including:
The above environmental problems also lead to numerous human health concerns and things to be on the look out for:
Further reading and resources
Wikis related to mine reclamation[wikis:reclamation] Next step challengesAreas for potential further development in tools, resources, and advocacy. Please edit or add to this section so folx can see where they might be able to contribute!
|
Revert | |
8 | bhamster |
March 30, 2022 17:21
| over 2 years ago
At its core, reclamation is an effort to restore harm done to a mined land’s soil health and prepare the land for another use after mining activities cease. Reclamation is ideally a two-part process undertaken from the moment mining activity begins: first minimizing negative environmental effects during mining and, at its conclusion, restoring land to a beneficial end use, such as open land, wildlife habitat, agriculture, residential/commercial use, etc. From a technical perspective, reclamation activities likely include efforts to “clean-up” the damaged landscape such as acid rock drainage management, efforts to control erosion and sedimentation, construction of tailings covers, revegetation, soil decontamination and topsoil replacement, and water treatment. While these technical aspects are needed, there is some research suggesting a more holistic, inclusive approach which aims to reframe reclamation as an “ongoing, creative process of community healing” emphasizing public participation and environmental justice concerns (Rethinking remediation). This wiki serves to collect projects, methods, research, and questions related to mine reclamation. Help this resource grow by editing this page here! Visit the mine reclamation tag page to see the latest posts about this topic on Public Lab, and receive updates by following the #mine-reclamation tag: Lead image: "Reclaimed Mine Area_DSC_0168" by Intermountain Region US Forest Service is marked with CC PDM 1.0.
What’s on this page:
Community stories and projectsPublic Lab community projects related to mine reclamation will appear here [nodes:grid:project:mine-reclamation] More stories and projects related to mine reclamation
Questions about mine reclamationQuestions tagged with [questions:mine-reclamation] Methods and activities on monitoring reclamation
Please make sure to monitor at locations that are safe and accessible to the public. Do not trespass on private property!
Photo documentationKinds of data produced: Visual records of observable reclamation permit violations / compliance, or reclamation progress. Examples of permit violations are explained in these posts:
METHODS: Aerial photography and videography[nodes:grid:mine-reclamation-photography] Photography combined with Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) to monitor plant growth over time on reclaimed land
Reviewing public records to detect violationsKinds of data produced: Possible reporting violations by mine operators: missing or unexpected data, repeated limit violations. These can be reported to a state agency (source: Appalachian Water Watch Citizen Monitoring Manual) METHODS: Reviewing Discharge Monitoring Reports (DMRs)
Water quality testingImage: “Acid mine drainage from the Mike Horse Mine complex enters upper Blackfoot River watershed,” Earthworks, CC BY. Kinds of data produced: Measurements of water pH, conductivity, and other parameters. Discharge and runoff from active mining can negatively impact these water quality indicators, while reclamation activities might improve them. Water quality data that you collect can potentially be compared with data reported on Discharge Monitoring Reports (source: Appalachian Water Watch Citizen Monitoring Manual), and compared with relevant regulatory standards. METHODS: Identifying sites for water quality testing
Measuring water pHpH values indicate how acidic (low pH) or alkaline (high pH) the water is. The US EPA sets its freshwater pH standard between 6.5 and 9. Drainage from mines can be acidic or alkaline depending on what minerals the water interacts with as it flows through the mining site. [nodes:grid:mine-water-ph] Note that one study in a Mid-Appalachian watershed found that while other water quality indicators improved after reclamation, pH did not:
Measuring water conductivityWater that has more inorganic solids dissolved in it (like salts, metals, or other chemical pollutants) generally conducts an electrical current better---it has a higher conductivity. Water downstream of mining activity could occasionally have higher conductivity due to dissolved solids from discharges.
Monitoring soil healthKinds of data produced: Measurements of soil pH, heavy metal concentrations, activity of microbial and other biological life, other indicators of soil health. Similar to impacts on water quality, mining activity and reclamation can affect these soil health indicators. METHODS: The soil contamination wiki at https://publiclab.org/wiki/soil is where we’ve collected and organized information on soil contaminants and testing methods. Below are some resources that might be particularly useful in monitoring or evaluating mine reclamation. [nodes:grid:mine-soil-health] ActivitiesActivities tagged with [notes:activity:mine-reclamation] Regulations on mine reclamationUS regulationsDifferent federal agencies are involved in regulating mining activity and reclamation in the US
For examples of how community science can engage with regulatory processes in mining and reclamation, see these posts from the Mountains and the Mines Monitoring Project team @ekpeterman, @jfreemanfilm, @junior_walk1337: Abandoned minesMany mines and surrounding lands that have since been abandoned by mine operators remain inadequately reclaimed. The Bureau of Land Management estimates that there are 100,000 to 500,000 abandoned mines in the western US alone, the location of most unrecorded. This poses massive public health, safety, and environmental hazards (publication about abandoned mine safety in CA). Tailings piles likely contain harmful chemicals which may leach into the soil, groundwater, and surrounding surface water, especially when left unmanaged at an abandoned site (source). The OSMRE runs the Abandoned Mine Land (AML) program to help fund state- and tribe-led reclamation of abandoned coal mines. The Department of the Interior recently extended this program through 2034 (source). Australia
Advocacy[nodes:grid:mine-reclamation-advocacy]
Environmental & Health ConcernsThere are numerous environmental concerns related to the mine reclamation process and abandoned mines, including:
The above environmental problems also lead to numerous human health concerns and things to be on the look out for:
Further reading and resources
Wikis related to mine reclamation[wikis:reclamation] Next step challengesAreas for potential further development in tools, resources, and advocacy. Please edit or add to this section so folx can see where they might be able to contribute!
|
Revert | |
7 | bhamster |
March 28, 2022 16:39
| over 2 years ago
At its core, reclamation is an effort to restore harm done to a mined land’s soil health and prepare the land for another use after mining activities cease. Reclamation is ideally a two-part process undertaken from the moment mining activity begins: first minimizing negative environmental effects during mining and, at its conclusion, restoring land to a beneficial end use, such as open land, wildlife habitat, agriculture, residential/commercial use, etc. From a technical perspective, reclamation activities likely include efforts to “clean-up” the damaged landscape such as acid rock drainage management, efforts to control erosion and sedimentation, construction of tailings covers, revegetation, soil decontamination and topsoil replacement, and water treatment. While these technical aspects are needed, there is some research suggesting a more holistic, inclusive approach which aims to reframe reclamation as an “ongoing, creative process of community healing” emphasizing public participation and environmental justice concerns (Rethinking remediation). This wiki serves to collect projects, methods, research, and questions related to mine reclamation. Help this resource grow by editing this page here! Visit the mine reclamation tag page to see the latest posts about this topic on Public Lab, and receive updates by following the #mine-reclamation tag: Lead image: "Reclaimed Mine Area_DSC_0168" by Intermountain Region US Forest Service is marked with CC PDM 1.0.
What’s on this page:
Community stories and projectsPublic Lab community projects related to mine reclamation will appear here [nodes:grid:project:mine-reclamation] More stories related to mine reclamation
Questions about mine reclamationQuestions tagged with [questions:mine-reclamation] Methods and activities on monitoring reclamation
Please make sure to monitor at locations that are safe and accessible to the public. Do not trespass on private property!
Photo documentationKinds of data produced: Visual records of observable reclamation permit violations / compliance, or reclamation progress. Examples of permit violations are explained in these posts:
METHODS: Aerial photography and videography[nodes:grid:mine-reclamation-photography] Photography combined with Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) to monitor plant growth over time on reclaimed land
Reviewing public records to detect violationsKinds of data produced: Possible reporting violations by mine operators: missing or unexpected data, repeated limit violations. These can be reported to a state agency (source: Appalachian Water Watch Citizen Monitoring Manual) METHODS: Reviewing Discharge Monitoring Reports (DMRs)
Water quality testingImage: “Acid mine drainage from the Mike Horse Mine complex enters upper Blackfoot River watershed,” Earthworks, CC BY. Kinds of data produced: Measurements of water pH, conductivity, and other parameters. Discharge and runoff from active mining can negatively impact these water quality indicators, while reclamation activities might improve them. Water quality data that you collect can potentially be compared with data reported on Discharge Monitoring Reports (source: Appalachian Water Watch Citizen Monitoring Manual), and compared with relevant regulatory standards. METHODS: Identifying sites for water quality testing
Measuring water pHpH values indicate how acidic (low pH) or alkaline (high pH) the water is. The US EPA sets its freshwater pH standard between 6.5 and 9. Drainage from mines can be acidic or alkaline depending on what minerals the water interacts with as it flows through the mining site. [nodes:grid:mine-water-ph] Note that one study in a Mid-Appalachian watershed found that while other water quality indicators improved after reclamation, pH did not:
Measuring water conductivityWater that has more inorganic solids dissolved in it (like salts, metals, or other chemical pollutants) generally conducts an electrical current better---it has a higher conductivity. Water downstream of mining activity could occasionally have higher conductivity due to dissolved solids from discharges.
Monitoring soil healthKinds of data produced: Measurements of soil pH, heavy metal concentrations, activity of microbial and other biological life, other indicators of soil health. Similar to impacts on water quality, mining activity and reclamation can affect these soil health indicators. METHODS: The soil contamination wiki at https://publiclab.org/wiki/soil is where we’ve collected and organized information on soil contaminants and testing methods. Below are some resources that might be particularly useful in monitoring or evaluating mine reclamation. [nodes:grid:mine-soil-health] ActivitiesActivities tagged with [notes:activity:mine-reclamation] Regulations on mine reclamationUS regulationsDifferent federal agencies are involved in regulating mining activity and reclamation in the US
For examples of how community science can engage with regulatory processes in mining and reclamation, see these posts from the Mountains and the Mines Monitoring Project team @ekpeterman, @jfreemanfilm, @junior_walk1337: Abandoned minesMany mines and surrounding lands that have since been abandoned by mine operators remain inadequately reclaimed. The Bureau of Land Management estimates that there are 100,000 to 500,000 abandoned mines in the western US alone, the location of most unrecorded. This poses massive public health, safety, and environmental hazards (publication about abandoned mine safety in CA). Tailings piles likely contain harmful chemicals which may leach into the soil, groundwater, and surrounding surface water, especially when left unmanaged at an abandoned site (source). The OSMRE runs the Abandoned Mine Land (AML) program to help fund state- and tribe-led reclamation of abandoned coal mines. The Department of the Interior recently extended this program through 2034 (source). Advocacy[nodes:grid:mine-reclamation-advocacy]
Environmental & Health ConcernsThere are numerous environmental concerns related to the mine reclamation process and abandoned mines, including:
The above environmental problems also lead to numerous human health concerns and things to be on the look out for:
Further reading and resources
Wikis related to mine reclamation[wikis:reclamation] Next step challengesAreas for potential further development in tools, resources, and advocacy. Please edit or add to this section so folx can see where they might be able to contribute!
|
Revert | |
6 | bhamster |
March 18, 2022 20:38
| almost 3 years ago
At its core, reclamation is an effort to restore harm done to a mined land’s soil health and prepare the land for another use after mining activities cease. Reclamation is ideally a two-part process undertaken from the moment mining activity begins: first minimizing negative environmental effects during mining and, at its conclusion, restoring land to a beneficial end use, such as open land, wildlife habitat, agriculture, residential/commercial use, etc. From a technical perspective, reclamation activities likely include efforts to “clean-up” the damaged landscape such as acid rock drainage management, efforts to control erosion and sedimentation, construction of tailings covers, revegetation, soil decontamination and topsoil replacement, and water treatment. While these technical aspects are needed, there is some research suggesting a more holistic, inclusive approach which aims to reframe reclamation as an “ongoing, creative process of community healing” emphasizing public participation and environmental justice concerns (Rethinking remediation). This wiki serves to collect projects, methods, research, and questions related to mine reclamation. Help this resource grow by editing this page here! Visit the mine reclamation tag page to see the latest posts about this topic on Public Lab, and receive updates by following the #mine-reclamation tag: Lead image: "Reclaimed Mine Area_DSC_0168" by Intermountain Region US Forest Service is marked with CC PDM 1.0.
What’s on this page:
Community stories and projectsPublic Lab community projects related to mine reclamation will appear here [wikis:project:mine-reclamation] More stories related to mine reclamation
Questions about mine reclamationQuestions tagged with [questions:mine-reclamation] Methods and activities on monitoring reclamation
Please make sure to monitor at locations that are safe and accessible to the public. Do not trespass on private property!
Photo documentationKinds of data produced: Visual records of observable reclamation permit violations / compliance, or reclamation progress. Examples of permit violations are explained in these posts:
METHODS: Aerial photography and videography[nodes:grid:mine-reclamation-photography] Photography combined with Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) to monitor plant growth over time on reclaimed land
Reviewing public records to detect violationsKinds of data produced: Possible reporting violations by mine operators: missing or unexpected data, repeated limit violations. These can be reported to a state agency (source: Appalachian Water Watch Citizen Monitoring Manual) METHODS: Reviewing Discharge Monitoring Reports (DMRs)
Water quality testingImage: “Acid mine drainage from the Mike Horse Mine complex enters upper Blackfoot River watershed,” Earthworks, CC BY. Kinds of data produced: Measurements of water pH, conductivity, and other parameters. Discharge and runoff from active mining can negatively impact these water quality indicators, while reclamation activities might improve them. Water quality data that you collect can potentially be compared with data reported on Discharge Monitoring Reports (source: Appalachian Water Watch Citizen Monitoring Manual), and compared with relevant regulatory standards. METHODS: Identifying sites for water quality testing
Measuring water pHpH values indicate how acidic (low pH) or alkaline (high pH) the water is. The US EPA sets its freshwater pH standard between 6.5 and 9. Drainage from mines can be acidic or alkaline depending on what minerals the water interacts with as it flows through the mining site. [nodes:grid:mine-water-ph] Note that one study in a Mid-Appalachian watershed found that while other water quality indicators improved after reclamation, pH did not:
Measuring water conductivityWater that has more inorganic solids dissolved in it (like salts, metals, or other chemical pollutants) generally conducts an electrical current better---it has a higher conductivity. Water downstream of mining activity could occasionally have higher conductivity due to dissolved solids from discharges.
Monitoring soil healthKinds of data produced: Measurements of soil pH, heavy metal concentrations, activity of microbial and other biological life, other indicators of soil health. Similar to impacts on water quality, mining activity and reclamation can affect these soil health indicators. METHODS: The soil contamination wiki at https://publiclab.org/wiki/soil is where we’ve collected and organized information on soil contaminants and testing methods. Below are some resources that might be particularly useful in monitoring or evaluating mine reclamation. [nodes:grid:mine-soil-health] ActivitiesActivities tagged with [notes:activity:mine-reclamation] Regulations on mine reclamationUS regulationsDifferent federal agencies are involved in regulating mining activity and reclamation in the US
For examples of how community science can engage with regulatory processes in mining and reclamation, see these posts from the Mountains and the Mines Monitoring Project team @ekpeterman, @jfreemanfilm, @junior_walk1337: Abandoned minesMany mines and surrounding lands that have since been abandoned by mine operators remain inadequately reclaimed. The Bureau of Land Management estimates that there are 100,000 to 500,000 abandoned mines in the western US alone, the location of most unrecorded. This poses massive public health, safety, and environmental hazards (publication about abandoned mine safety in CA). Tailings piles likely contain harmful chemicals which may leach into the soil, groundwater, and surrounding surface water, especially when left unmanaged at an abandoned site (source). The OSMRE runs the Abandoned Mine Land (AML) program to help fund state- and tribe-led reclamation of abandoned coal mines. The Department of the Interior recently extended this program through 2034 (source). Advocacy[nodes:grid:mine-reclamation-advocacy]
Environmental & Health ConcernsThere are numerous environmental concerns related to the mine reclamation process and abandoned mines, including:
The above environmental problems also lead to numerous human health concerns and things to be on the look out for:
Further reading and resources
Wikis related to mine reclamation[wikis:reclamation] Next step challengesAreas for potential further development in tools, resources, and advocacy. Please edit or add to this section so folx can see where they might be able to contribute!
|
Revert | |
5 | laurel_mire |
March 18, 2022 13:55
| almost 3 years ago
Lead image: "Reclaimed Mine Area_DSC_0168" by Intermountain Region US Forest Service is marked with CC PDM 1.0. At its core, reclamation is an effort to restore harm done to a mined land’s soil health and prepare the land for another use after mining activities cease. Reclamation is ideally a two-part process undertaken from the moment mining activity begins: first minimizing negative environmental effects during mining and, at its conclusion, restoring land to a beneficial end use, such as open land, wildlife habitat, agriculture, residential/commercial use, etc. From a technical perspective, reclamation activities likely include efforts to “clean-up” the damaged landscape such as acid rock drainage management, efforts to control erosion and sedimentation, construction of tailings covers, revegetation, soil decontamination and topsoil replacement, and water treatment. While these technical aspects are needed, there is some research suggesting a more holistic, inclusive approach which aims to reframe reclamation as an “ongoing, creative process of community healing” emphasizing public participation and environmental justice concerns (Rethinking remediation). This wiki serves to collect projects, methods, research, and questions related to mine reclamation. Help this resource grow by editing this page here! Visit the mine reclamation tag page to see the latest posts about this topic on Public Lab, and receive updates by following the #mine-reclamation tag:
What’s on this page:
Community stories and projectsPublic Lab community projects related to mine reclamation will appear here [wikis:project:mine-reclamation] More stories related to mine reclamation
Questions about mine reclamationQuestions tagged with [questions:mine-reclamation] Methods and activities on monitoring reclamation
Please make sure to monitor at locations that are safe and accessible to the public. Do not trespass on private property!
Photo documentationKinds of data produced: Visual records of observable reclamation permit violations / compliance, or reclamation progress. Examples of permit violations are explained in these posts:
METHODS: Aerial photography and videography[nodes:grid:mine-reclamation-photography] Photography combined with Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) to monitor plant growth over time on reclaimed land
Reviewing public records to detect violationsKinds of data produced: Possible reporting violations by mine operators: missing or unexpected data, repeated limit violations. These can be reported to a state agency (source: Appalachian Water Watch Citizen Monitoring Manual) METHODS: Reviewing Discharge Monitoring Reports (DMRs)
Water quality testingImage: “Acid mine drainage from the Mike Horse Mine complex enters upper Blackfoot River watershed,” Earthworks, CC BY. Kinds of data produced: Measurements of water pH, conductivity, and other parameters. Discharge and runoff from active mining can negatively impact these water quality indicators, while reclamation activities might improve them. Water quality data that you collect can potentially be compared with data reported on Discharge Monitoring Reports (source: Appalachian Water Watch Citizen Monitoring Manual), and compared with relevant regulatory standards. METHODS: Identifying sites for water quality testing
Measuring water pHpH values indicate how acidic (low pH) or alkaline (high pH) the water is. The US EPA sets its freshwater pH standard between 6.5 and 9. Drainage from mines can be acidic or alkaline depending on what minerals the water interacts with as it flows through the mining site. [nodes:grid:mine-water-ph] Note that one study in a Mid-Appalachian watershed found that while other water quality indicators improved after reclamation, pH did not:
Measuring water conductivityWater that has more inorganic solids dissolved in it (like salts, metals, or other chemical pollutants) generally conducts an electrical current better---it has a higher conductivity. Water downstream of mining activity could occasionally have higher conductivity due to dissolved solids from discharges.
Monitoring soil healthKinds of data produced: Measurements of soil pH, heavy metal concentrations, activity of microbial and other biological life, other indicators of soil health. Similar to impacts on water quality, mining activity and reclamation can affect these soil health indicators. METHODS: The soil contamination wiki at https://publiclab.org/wiki/soil is where we’ve collected and organized information on soil contaminants and testing methods. Below are some resources that might be particularly useful in monitoring or evaluating mine reclamation. [nodes:grid:mine-soil-health] ActivitiesActivities tagged with [notes:activity:mine-reclamation] Regulations on mine reclamationUS regulationsDifferent federal agencies are involved in regulating mining activity and reclamation in the US
For examples of how community science can engage with regulatory processes in mining and reclamation, see these posts from the Mountains and the Mines Monitoring Project team @ekpeterman, @jfreemanfilm, @junior_walk1337: Abandoned minesMany mines and surrounding lands that have since been abandoned by mine operators remain inadequately reclaimed. The Bureau of Land Management estimates that there are 100,000 to 500,000 abandoned mines in the western US alone, the location of most unrecorded. This poses massive public health, safety, and environmental hazards (publication about abandoned mine safety in CA). Tailings piles likely contain harmful chemicals which may leach into the soil, groundwater, and surrounding surface water, especially when left unmanaged at an abandoned site (source). The OSMRE runs the Abandoned Mine Land (AML) program to help fund state- and tribe-led reclamation of abandoned coal mines. The Department of the Interior recently extended this program through 2034 (source). Advocacy[nodes:grid:mine-reclamation-advocacy]
Environmental & Health ConcernsThere are numerous environmental concerns related to the mine reclamation process and abandoned mines, including:
The above environmental problems also lead to numerous human health concerns and things to be on the look out for:
Further reading and resources
Wikis related to mine reclamation[wikis:reclamation] Next step challenges |
Revert | |
4 | laurel_mire |
March 18, 2022 13:55
| almost 3 years ago
Lead image: "Reclaimed Mine Area_DSC_0168" by Intermountain Region US Forest Service is marked with CC PDM 1.0. At its core, reclamation is an effort to restore harm done to a mined land’s soil health and prepare the land for another use after mining activities cease. Reclamation is ideally a two-part process undertaken from the moment mining activity begins: first minimizing negative environmental effects during mining and, at its conclusion, restoring land to a beneficial end use, such as open land, wildlife habitat, agriculture, residential/commercial use, etc. From a technical perspective, reclamation activities likely include efforts to “clean-up” the damaged landscape such as acid rock drainage management, efforts to control erosion and sedimentation, construction of tailings covers, revegetation, soil decontamination and topsoil replacement, and water treatment. While these technical aspects are needed, there is some research suggesting a more holistic, inclusive approach which aims to reframe reclamation as an “ongoing, creative process of community healing” emphasizing public participation and environmental justice concerns (Rethinking remediation). This wiki serves to collect projects, methods, research, and questions related to mine reclamation. Help this resource grow by editing this page here! Visit the mine reclamation tag page to see the latest posts about this topic on Public Lab, and receive updates by following the #mine-reclamation tag:
What’s on this page:
Community stories and projectsPublic Lab community projects related to mine reclamation will appear here [wikis:project:mine-reclamation] More stories related to mine reclamation
Questions about mine reclamationQuestions tagged with [questions:mine-reclamation] Methods and activities on monitoring reclamation
Please make sure to monitor at locations that are safe and accessible to the public. Do not trespass on private property!
Photo documentationKinds of data produced: Visual records of observable reclamation permit violations / compliance, or reclamation progress. Examples of permit violations are explained in these posts:
METHODS: Aerial photography and videography[nodes:grid:mine-reclamation-photography] Photography combined with Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) to monitor plant growth over time on reclaimed land
Reviewing public records to detect violationsKinds of data produced: Possible reporting violations by mine operators: missing or unexpected data, repeated limit violations. These can be reported to a state agency (source: Appalachian Water Watch Citizen Monitoring Manual) METHODS: Reviewing Discharge Monitoring Reports (DMRs)
Water quality testingImage: “Acid mine drainage from the Mike Horse Mine complex enters upper Blackfoot River watershed,” Earthworks, CC BY. Kinds of data produced: Measurements of water pH, conductivity, and other parameters. Discharge and runoff from active mining can negatively impact these water quality indicators, while reclamation activities might improve them. Water quality data that you collect can potentially be compared with data reported on Discharge Monitoring Reports (source: Appalachian Water Watch Citizen Monitoring Manual), and compared with relevant regulatory standards. METHODS: Identifying sites for water quality testing
Measuring water pHpH values indicate how acidic (low pH) or alkaline (high pH) the water is. The US EPA sets its freshwater pH standard between 6.5 and 9. Drainage from mines can be acidic or alkaline depending on what minerals the water interacts with as it flows through the mining site. [nodes:grid:mine-water-ph] Note that one study in a Mid-Appalachian watershed found that while other water quality indicators improved after reclamation, pH did not:
Measuring water conductivityWater that has more inorganic solids dissolved in it (like salts, metals, or other chemical pollutants) generally conducts an electrical current better---it has a higher conductivity. Water downstream of mining activity could occasionally have higher conductivity due to dissolved solids from discharges.
Monitoring soil healthKinds of data produced: Measurements of soil pH, heavy metal concentrations, activity of microbial and other biological life, other indicators of soil health. Similar to impacts on water quality, mining activity and reclamation can affect these soil health indicators. METHODS: The soil contamination wiki at https://publiclab.org/wiki/soil is where we’ve collected and organized information on soil contaminants and testing methods. Below are some resources that might be particularly useful in monitoring or evaluating mine reclamation. [nodes:grid:mine-soil-health] ActivitiesActivities tagged with [notes:activity:mine-reclamation] Regulations on mine reclamationUS regulationsDifferent federal agencies are involved in regulating mining activity and reclamation in the US
For examples of how community science can engage with regulatory processes in mining and reclamation, see these posts from the Mountains and the Mines Monitoring Project team @ekpeterman, @jfreemanfilm, @junior_walk1337: Abandoned minesMany mines and surrounding lands that have since been abandoned by mine operators remain inadequately reclaimed. The Bureau of Land Management estimates that there are 100,000 to 500,000 abandoned mines in the western US alone, the location of most unrecorded. This poses massive public health, safety, and environmental hazards (publication about abandoned mine safety in CA). Tailings piles likely contain harmful chemicals which may leach into the soil, groundwater, and surrounding surface water, especially when left unmanaged at an abandoned site (source). The OSMRE runs the Abandoned Mine Land (AML) program to help fund state- and tribe-led reclamation of abandoned coal mines. The Department of the Interior recently extended this program through 2034 (source). Advocacy[nodes:grid:mine-reclamation-advocacy]
Environmental & Health ConcernsThere are numerous environmental concerns related to the mine reclamation process and abandoned mines, including:
The above environmental problems also lead to numerous human health concerns and things to be on the look out for:
Further reading and resources
Wikis related to mine reclamation[wikis:reclamation] Next step challenges |
Revert | |
3 | laurel_mire |
March 18, 2022 13:52
| almost 3 years ago
Lead image: "Reclaimed Mine Area_DSC_0168" by Intermountain Region US Forest Service is marked with CC PDM 1.0. At its core, reclamation is an effort to restore harm done to a mined land’s soil health and prepare the land for another use after mining activities cease. Reclamation is ideally a two-part process undertaken from the moment mining activity begins: first minimizing negative environmental effects during mining and, at its conclusion, restoring land to a beneficial end use, such as open land, wildlife habitat, agriculture, residential/commercial use, etc. From a technical perspective, reclamation activities likely include efforts to “clean-up” the damaged landscape such as acid rock drainage management, efforts to control erosion and sedimentation, construction of tailings covers, revegetation, soil decontamination and topsoil replacement, and water treatment. While these technical aspects are needed, there is some research suggesting a more holistic, inclusive approach which aims to reframe reclamation as an “ongoing, creative process of community healing” emphasizing public participation and environmental justice concerns (Rethinking remediation). This wiki serves to collect projects, methods, research, and questions related to mine reclamation. Help this resource grow by editing this page here! Visit the mine reclamation tag page to see the latest posts about this topic on Public Lab, and receive updates by following the #mine-reclamation tag:
What’s on this page:
Community stories and projectsPublic Lab community projects related to mine reclamation will appear here [wikis:project:mine-reclamation] More stories related to mine reclamation
Questions about mine reclamationQuestions tagged with [questions:mine-reclamation] Methods and activities on monitoring reclamation
Please make sure to monitor at locations that are safe and accessible to the public. Do not trespass on private property!
Photo documentationKinds of data produced: Visual records of observable reclamation permit violations / compliance, or reclamation progress. Examples of permit violations are explained in these posts:
METHODS: Aerial photography and videography[nodes:grid:mine-reclamation-photography] Photography combined with Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) to monitor plant growth over time on reclaimed land
Reviewing public records to detect violationsKinds of data produced: Possible reporting violations by mine operators: missing or unexpected data, repeated limit violations. These can be reported to a state agency (source: Appalachian Water Watch Citizen Monitoring Manual) METHODS: Reviewing Discharge Monitoring Reports (DMRs)
Water quality testingImage: “Acid mine drainage from the Mike Horse Mine complex enters upper Blackfoot River watershed,” Earthworks, CC BY. Kinds of data produced: Measurements of water pH, conductivity, and other parameters. Discharge and runoff from active mining can negatively impact these water quality indicators, while reclamation activities might improve them. Water quality data that you collect can potentially be compared with data reported on Discharge Monitoring Reports (source: Appalachian Water Watch Citizen Monitoring Manual), and compared with relevant regulatory standards. METHODS: Identifying sites for water quality testing
Measuring water pHpH values indicate how acidic (low pH) or alkaline (high pH) the water is. The US EPA sets its freshwater pH standard between 6.5 and 9. Drainage from mines can be acidic or alkaline depending on what minerals the water interacts with as it flows through the mining site. [nodes:grid:mine-water-ph] Note that one study in a Mid-Appalachian watershed found that while other water quality indicators improved after reclamation, pH did not:
Measuring water conductivityWater that has more inorganic solids dissolved in it (like salts, metals, or other chemical pollutants) generally conducts an electrical current better---it has a higher conductivity. Water downstream of mining activity could occasionally have higher conductivity due to dissolved solids from discharges.
Monitoring soil healthKinds of data produced: Measurements of soil pH, heavy metal concentrations, activity of microbial and other biological life, other indicators of soil health. Similar to impacts on water quality, mining activity and reclamation can affect these soil health indicators. METHODS: The soil contamination wiki at https://publiclab.org/wiki/soil is where we’ve collected and organized information on soil contaminants and testing methods. Below are some resources that might be particularly useful in monitoring or evaluating mine reclamation. [nodes:grid:mine-soil-health] ActivitiesActivities tagged with [notes:activity:mine-reclamation] Regulations on mine reclamationUS regulationsDifferent federal agencies are involved in regulating mining activity and reclamation in the US
For examples of how community science can engage with regulatory processes in mining and reclamation, see these posts from the Mountains and the Mines Monitoring Project team @ekpeterman, @jfreemanfilm, @junior_walk1337: Abandoned minesMany mines and surrounding lands that have since been abandoned by mine operators remain inadequately reclaimed. The Bureau of Land Management estimates that there are 100,000 to 500,000 abandoned mines in the western US alone, the location of most unrecorded. This poses massive public health, safety, and environmental hazards (publication about abandoned mine safety in CA). Tailings piles likely contain harmful chemicals which may leach into the soil, groundwater, and surrounding surface water, especially when left unmanaged at an abandoned site (source). The OSMRE runs the Abandoned Mine Land (AML) program to help fund state- and tribe-led reclamation of abandoned coal mines. The Department of the Interior recently extended this program through 2034 (source). Advocacy[nodes:grid:mine-reclamation-advocacy]
Environmental & Health ConcernsThere are numerous environmental concerns related to the mine reclamation process and abandoned mines, including:
The above environmental problems also lead to numerous human health concerns and things to be on the look out for:
Further reading and resources
Wikis related to mine reclamation[wikis:reclamation] Next step challenges |
Revert | |
2 | bhamster |
March 17, 2022 23:00
| almost 3 years ago
At its core, reclamation is an effort to restore harm done to a mined land’s soil health and prepare the land for another use after mining activities cease. Reclamation is ideally a two-part process undertaken from the moment mining activity begins: first minimizing negative environmental effects during mining and, at its conclusion, restoring land to a beneficial end use, such as open land, wildlife habitat, agriculture, residential/commercial use, etc. From a technical perspective, reclamation activities likely include efforts to “clean-up” the damaged landscape such as acid rock drainage management, efforts to control erosion and sedimentation, construction of tailings covers, revegetation, soil decontamination and topsoil replacement, and water treatment. While these technical aspects are needed, there is some research suggesting a more holistic, inclusive approach which aims to reframe reclamation as an “ongoing, creative process of community healing” emphasizing public participation and environmental justice concerns (Rethinking remediation). This wiki serves to collect projects, methods, research, and questions related to mine reclamation. Help this resource grow by editing this page here! Visit the mine reclamation tag page to see the latest posts about this topic on Public Lab, and receive updates by following the #mine-reclamation tag:
What’s on this page:
Community stories and projectsPublic Lab community projects related to mine reclamation will appear here [wikis:project:mine-reclamation] More stories related to mine reclamation
Questions about mine reclamationQuestions tagged with [questions:mine-reclamation] Methods and activities on monitoring reclamation
Please make sure to monitor at locations that are safe and accessible to the public. Do not trespass on private property!
Photo documentationKinds of data produced: Visual records of observable reclamation permit violations / compliance, or reclamation progress. Examples of permit violations are explained in these posts:
METHODS: Aerial photography and videography[nodes:grid:mine-reclamation-photography] Photography combined with Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) to monitor plant growth over time on reclaimed land
Reviewing public records to detect violationsKinds of data produced: Possible reporting violations by mine operators: missing or unexpected data, repeated limit violations. These can be reported to a state agency (source: Appalachian Water Watch Citizen Monitoring Manual) METHODS: Reviewing Discharge Monitoring Reports (DMRs)
Water quality testingImage: “Acid mine drainage from the Mike Horse Mine complex enters upper Blackfoot River watershed,” Earthworks, CC BY. Kinds of data produced: Measurements of water pH, conductivity, and other parameters. Discharge and runoff from active mining can negatively impact these water quality indicators, while reclamation activities might improve them. Water quality data that you collect can potentially be compared with data reported on Discharge Monitoring Reports (source: Appalachian Water Watch Citizen Monitoring Manual), and compared with relevant regulatory standards. METHODS: Identifying sites for water quality testing
Measuring water pHpH values indicate how acidic (low pH) or alkaline (high pH) the water is. The US EPA sets its freshwater pH standard between 6.5 and 9. Drainage from mines can be acidic or alkaline depending on what minerals the water interacts with as it flows through the mining site. [nodes:grid:mine-water-ph] Note that one study in a Mid-Appalachian watershed found that while other water quality indicators improved after reclamation, pH did not:
Measuring water conductivityWater that has more inorganic solids dissolved in it (like salts, metals, or other chemical pollutants) generally conducts an electrical current better---it has a higher conductivity. Water downstream of mining activity could occasionally have higher conductivity due to dissolved solids from discharges.
Monitoring soil healthKinds of data produced: Measurements of soil pH, heavy metal concentrations, activity of microbial and other biological life, other indicators of soil health. Similar to impacts on water quality, mining activity and reclamation can affect these soil health indicators. METHODS: The soil contamination wiki at https://publiclab.org/wiki/soil is where we’ve collected and organized information on soil contaminants and testing methods. Below are some resources that might be particularly useful in monitoring or evaluating mine reclamation. [nodes:grid:mine-soil-health] ActivitiesActivities tagged with [notes:activity:mine-reclamation] Regulations on mine reclamationUS regulationsDifferent federal agencies are involved in regulating mining activity and reclamation in the US
For examples of how community science can engage with regulatory processes in mining and reclamation, see these posts from the Mountains and the Mines Monitoring Project team @ekpeterman, @jfreemanfilm, @junior_walk1337: Abandoned minesMany mines and surrounding lands that have since been abandoned by mine operators remain inadequately reclaimed. The Bureau of Land Management estimates that there are 100,000 to 500,000 abandoned mines in the western US alone, the location of most unrecorded. This poses massive public health, safety, and environmental hazards (publication about abandoned mine safety in CA). Tailings piles likely contain harmful chemicals which may leach into the soil, groundwater, and surrounding surface water, especially when left unmanaged at an abandoned site (source). The OSMRE runs the Abandoned Mine Land (AML) program to help fund state- and tribe-led reclamation of abandoned coal mines. The Department of the Interior recently extended this program through 2034 (source). Advocacy[nodes:grid:mine-reclamation-advocacy]
Environmental & Health ConcernsThere are numerous environmental concerns related to the mine reclamation process and abandoned mines, including:
The above environmental problems also lead to numerous human health concerns and things to be on the look out for:
Further reading and resources
Wikis related to mine reclamation[wikis:reclamation] Next step challenges |
Revert | |
1 | bhamster |
March 17, 2022 22:58
| almost 3 years ago
At its core, reclamation is an effort to restore harm done to a mined land’s soil health and prepare the land for another use after mining activities cease. Reclamation is ideally a two-part process undertaken from the moment mining activity begins: first minimizing negative environmental effects during mining and, at its conclusion, restoring land to a beneficial end use, such as open land, wildlife habitat, agriculture, residential/commercial use, etc. From a technical perspective, reclamation activities likely include efforts to “clean-up” the damaged landscape such as acid rock drainage management, efforts to control erosion and sedimentation, construction of tailings covers, revegetation, soil decontamination and topsoil replacement, and water treatment. While these technical aspects are needed, there is some research suggesting a more holistic, inclusive approach which aims to reframe reclamation as an “ongoing, creative process of community healing” emphasizing public participation and environmental justice concerns (Rethinking remediation). This wiki serves to collect projects, methods, research, and questions related to mine reclamation. Help this resource grow by editing this page here! Visit the mine reclamation tag page to see the latest posts about this topic on Public Lab, and receive updates by following #mine-reclamation:
What’s on this page:
Community stories and projectsPublic Lab community projects related to mine reclamation will appear here [wikis:project:mine-reclamation] More stories related to mine reclamation
Questions about mine reclamationQuestions tagged with [questions:mine-reclamation] Methods and activities on monitoring reclamation
Please make sure to monitor at locations that are safe and accessible to the public. Do not trespass on private property!
Photo documentationKinds of data produced: Visual records of observable reclamation permit violations / compliance, or reclamation progress. Examples of permit violations are explained in these posts:
METHODS: Aerial photography and videography[nodes:grid:mine-reclamation-photography] Photography combined with Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) to monitor plant growth over time on reclaimed land
Reviewing public records to detect violationsKinds of data produced: Possible reporting violations by mine operators: missing or unexpected data, repeated limit violations. These can be reported to a state agency (source: Appalachian Water Watch Citizen Monitoring Manual) METHODS: Reviewing Discharge Monitoring Reports (DMRs)
Water quality testingImage: “Acid mine drainage from the Mike Horse Mine complex enters upper Blackfoot River watershed,” Earthworks, CC BY. Kinds of data produced: Measurements of water pH, conductivity, and other parameters. Discharge and runoff from active mining can negatively impact these water quality indicators, while reclamation activities might improve them. Water quality data that you collect can potentially be compared with data reported on Discharge Monitoring Reports (source: Appalachian Water Watch Citizen Monitoring Manual), and compared with relevant regulatory standards. METHODS: Identifying sites for water quality testing
Measuring water pHpH values indicate how acidic (low pH) or alkaline (high pH) the water is. The US EPA sets its freshwater pH standard between 6.5 and 9. Drainage from mines can be acidic or alkaline depending on what minerals the water interacts with as it flows through the mining site. [nodes:grid:mine-water-ph] Note that one study in a Mid-Appalachian watershed found that while other water quality indicators improved after reclamation, pH did not:
Measuring water conductivityWater that has more inorganic solids dissolved in it (like salts, metals, or other chemical pollutants) generally conducts an electrical current better---it has a higher conductivity. Water downstream of mining activity could occasionally have higher conductivity due to dissolved solids from discharges.
Monitoring soil healthKinds of data produced: Measurements of soil pH, heavy metal concentrations, activity of microbial and other biological life, other indicators of soil health. Similar to impacts on water quality, mining activity and reclamation can affect these soil health indicators. METHODS: The soil contamination wiki at https://publiclab.org/wiki/soil is where we’ve collected and organized information on soil contaminants and testing methods. Below are some resources that might be particularly useful in monitoring or evaluating mine reclamation. [nodes:grid:mine-soil-health] ActivitiesActivities tagged with [notes:activity:mine-reclamation] Regulations on mine reclamationUS regulationsDifferent federal agencies are involved in regulating mining activity and reclamation in the US
For examples of how community science can engage with regulatory processes in mining and reclamation, see these posts from the Mountains and the Mines Monitoring Project team @ekpeterman, @jfreemanfilm, @junior_walk1337: Abandoned minesMany mines and surrounding lands that have since been abandoned by mine operators remain inadequately reclaimed. The Bureau of Land Management estimates that there are 100,000 to 500,000 abandoned mines in the western US alone, the location of most unrecorded. This poses massive public health, safety, and environmental hazards (publication about abandoned mine safety in CA). Tailings piles likely contain harmful chemicals which may leach into the soil, groundwater, and surrounding surface water, especially when left unmanaged at an abandoned site (source). The OSMRE runs the Abandoned Mine Land (AML) program to help fund state- and tribe-led reclamation of abandoned coal mines. The Department of the Interior recently extended this program through 2034 (source). Advocacy[nodes:grid:mine-reclamation-advocacy]
Environmental & Health ConcernsThere are numerous environmental concerns related to the mine reclamation process and abandoned mines, including:
The above environmental problems also lead to numerous human health concerns and things to be on the look out for:
Further reading and resources
Wikis related to mine reclamation[wikis:reclamation] Next step challenges |
Revert | |
0 | laurel_mire |
March 17, 2022 19:30
| almost 3 years ago
What’s on this page:
What is mine reclamation?At its core, reclamation is an effort to restore harm done to a mined land’s soil health and prepare the land for another use after mining activities cease. Reclamation is ideally a two-part process undertaken from the moment mining activity begins: first minimizing negative environmental effects during mining and, at its conclusion, restoring land to a beneficial end use, such as open land, wildlife habitat, agriculture, residential/commercial use, etc. From a technical perspective, reclamation activities likely include efforts to “clean-up” the damaged landscape such as acid rock drainage management, efforts to control erosion and sedimentation, construction of tailings covers, revegetation, soil decontamination and topsoil replacement, and water treatment. While these technical aspects are needed, there is some research suggesting a more holistic, inclusive approach which aims to reframe reclamation as an “ongoing, creative process of community healing” emphasizing public participation and environmental justice concerns (Rethinking remediation). This wiki serves to collect projects, methods, research, and questions related to mine reclamation. Help this resource grow by editing this page here! Community stories and projectsPublic Lab community projects related to mine reclamation will appear here [wikis:project:mine-reclamation] More stories related to mine reclamation
Questions about mine reclamationQuestions tagged with [questions:mine-reclamation] Methods and activities on monitoring reclamation
Please make sure to monitor at locations that are safe and accessible to the public. Do not trespass on private property!
Photo documentationKinds of data produced: Visual records of observable reclamation permit violations / compliance, or reclamation progress. Examples of permit violations are explained in these posts:
METHODS: Aerial photography and videography[nodes:grid:mine-reclamation-photography] Photography combined with Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) to monitor plant growth over time on reclaimed land
Reviewing public records to detect violationsKinds of data produced: Possible reporting violations by mine operators: missing or unexpected data, repeated limit violations. These can be reported to a state agency (source: Appalachian Water Watch Citizen Monitoring Manual) METHODS: Reviewing Discharge Monitoring Reports (DMRs)
Water quality testingKinds of data produced: Measurements of water pH, conductivity, and other parameters. Discharge and runoff from active mining can negatively impact these water quality indicators, while reclamation activities might improve them. Water quality data that you collect can potentially be compared with data reported on Discharge Monitoring Reports (source: Appalachian Water Watch Citizen Monitoring Manual), and compared with relevant regulatory standards. METHODS: Identifying sites for water quality testing
Measuring water pHpH values indicate how acidic (low pH) or alkaline (high pH) the water is. The US EPA sets its freshwater pH standard between 6.5 and 9. Drainage from mines can be acidic or alkaline depending on what minerals the water interacts with as it flows through the mining site. [nodes:grid:mine-water-ph] Note that one study in a Mid-Appalachian watershed found that while other water quality indicators improved after reclamation, pH did not:
Measuring water conductivityWater that has more inorganic solids dissolved in it (like salts, metals, or other chemical pollutants) generally conducts an electrical current better---it has a higher conductivity. Water downstream of mining activity could occasionally have higher conductivity due to dissolved solids from discharges.
Monitoring soil healthKinds of data produced: Measurements of soil pH, heavy metal concentrations, activity of microbial and other biological life, other indicators of soil health. Similar to impacts on water quality, mining activity and reclamation can affect these soil health indicators. METHODS: The soil contamination wiki at https://publiclab.org/wiki/soil is where we’ve collected and organized information on soil contaminants and testing methods. Below are some resources that might be particularly useful in monitoring or evaluating mine reclamation. [nodes:grid:mine-soil-health] ActivitiesActivities tagged with [notes:activity:mine-reclamation] Regulations on mine reclamationAdvocacy[nodes:grid:mine-reclamation-advocacy]
Environmental & Health ConcernsThere are numerous environmental concerns related to the mine reclamation process and abandoned mines, including:
The above environmental problems also lead to numerous human health concerns and things to be on the look out for:
Further reading and resources
Wikis related to mine reclamation[wikis:reclamation] Next step challenges |
Revert |