OFR-167-82 Selective Placement Of Strip Mine Overburden In Montana - V Summary Report

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 212
- File Size:
- 80109 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1981
Abstract
The objective of this five year study was to investigate the means of establishing non-polluted ground-water and root zone systems in areas where surface mining intercepts physiochemically unsuitable overburden materials. Overburden may need to be sampled on a 60 m grid in order to delineate materials unsuitable for reclamation and to accurately implement selective handling operations. Unsuitable overburden materials were buried successfully in a dragline operation with a minimum of delays, but costs were increased 12 to 53%. After three years the buried material remains above the reestablished aquifer and below the root zone. Construction of a clay cap over the buried material may not be required in semiarid environments. It was shown that some unsuitable overburden materials do not have to be special handled. When inhibitory material constituted <5% of the total overburden volume, such material was essentially not detectable in the resultant spoil pile due to mixing/dilution processes. When inhibitory material exceeded 15% of the overburden volume it was always found in the resultant spoil pile, generally with a smaller extent, indicating partial dilution. At least a portion of the postmine aquifer had hydraulic conductivity rates lower than the premine system, indicating the reestablished aquifer may, in part, conduct ground water very slowly. Postmine ground-water chemical quality in spoil materials had poorer quality compared to premine ground water.
Citation
APA:
(1981) OFR-167-82 Selective Placement Of Strip Mine Overburden In Montana - V Summary ReportMLA: OFR-167-82 Selective Placement Of Strip Mine Overburden In Montana - V Summary Report. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1981.