Effects Of Previous Tailings Disposal On Upper Sonoran Vegetation Of The Getchell Area

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 21
- File Size:
- 659 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1974
Abstract
At Getchell, Nevada a thousand tons per day mill for extracting gold from an ore containing orpiment and realgar was operated several years until early 1967. A cyanide process with a roaster was used in the processing of the ore. Mill wastes were contained in tailings ponds, in which the concentration of arsenic, currently, is one per cent or higher, Studies were conducted determining the effect of the tailing wastes on the Upper Sonoran vegetation of the area. Grid and line-intercept techniques were employed to obtain botanical informatics of the area surrounding the tailings ponds. Data of the per cent ground cover, species frequency, and plant vitality as a function of distance from the tailings ponds was collected. The data was compared to other botanical data collected from a control site outside the influence of the tailings ponds. In an attempt to isolate naturally occurring factors for varying plant communities from hose induced by factors derived from the close proximity of the tailings, soil cores were taken along the line-intercepts at intervals of 30 meters. The cores were analyzed for several compounds and elements needed for growth, or known to inhibit growth. Specific physical parameters of the soil samples were also taken. The paper describes the impact made by mill wastes containing large amounts of arsenic on the Upper Sonoran vegetation of the Getchell region. Described in detail are the techniques used to make the correlations between the plant communities and the influences of mill wastes.
Citation
APA:
(1974) Effects Of Previous Tailings Disposal On Upper Sonoran Vegetation Of The Getchell AreaMLA: Effects Of Previous Tailings Disposal On Upper Sonoran Vegetation Of The Getchell Area. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1974.