Hydrology Of The Proposed National Underground Science Laboratory At The Homestake Mine In Lead, South Dakota

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
A. D. Davis C. J. Webb F. W. Beaver
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
4
File Size:
302 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2003

Abstract

The proposed National Underground Science Laboratory will be housed in the former Homestake Gold Mine at Lead, South Dakota. Uses will include underground neutrino experiments that must be shielded by several thousand feet of rock, as well as ground-water research in fracture-flow environments, and investigation of the microbiology of extreme environments. The Homestake Mine has about 300 miles of underground workings. Seepage of ground water into the mine openings is approximately 500 gallons per minute. Average annual precipitation in the northern Black Hills is approximately 28 inches per year. The majority of this becomes surface-water runoff or evapotranspiration, with little ground-water recharge because of the low permeability of the Precambrian rocks in the area. Dewatering of the workings over the 125 years of operation of the mine has influenced the subsurface hydrology of the 8,000-footdeep mine.
Citation

APA: A. D. Davis C. J. Webb F. W. Beaver  (2003)  Hydrology Of The Proposed National Underground Science Laboratory At The Homestake Mine In Lead, South Dakota

MLA: A. D. Davis C. J. Webb F. W. Beaver Hydrology Of The Proposed National Underground Science Laboratory At The Homestake Mine In Lead, South Dakota. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2003.

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