Bio-Indicator Evaluation of Water Quality Impacts from Inactive and Abandoned Mines in the Bear Butte Creek Basin of the Black Hills

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
A. D. Davis C. J. Webb J. L. Sorensen
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
10
File Size:
1686 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1999

Abstract

Environmental impacts from acidic mine drainage are growing national concerns that are particularly acute in the headwaters of the Rocky Mountain region. In the Black Hills of South Dakota, approximately one thousand mines are inactive or abandoned, most of them in the headwaters of major drainages. This paper examines the Bear Butte Creek basin, a heavily mineralized watershed with significant historical mining impacts and a surface gold mine permitted in 1997. The watershed loses its surface discharge to swallow holes in the karstic Madison Limestone. The integrity of the aquatic ecosystem was monitored with a suite of sitespecific bio-indicators. Stream surveys covered the entire reach of Bear Butte Creek from near its headwaters to the swallow holes in the Madison aquifer. Data from the stream surveys, water-quality sampling, and bio-indicator surveys clearly showed that water-quality impacts are limited mainly to Strawberry Creek and to the area of Bear Butte Creek near and downstream of the town of Galena.
Citation

APA: A. D. Davis C. J. Webb J. L. Sorensen  (1999)  Bio-Indicator Evaluation of Water Quality Impacts from Inactive and Abandoned Mines in the Bear Butte Creek Basin of the Black Hills

MLA: A. D. Davis C. J. Webb J. L. Sorensen Bio-Indicator Evaluation of Water Quality Impacts from Inactive and Abandoned Mines in the Bear Butte Creek Basin of the Black Hills. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1999.

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