Hydrologic Aspects of Strip Mining in the Subbituminous Coal Fields of Montana (8696a741-0a2b-4fce-a049-251c4c0f2db8)

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 7
- File Size:
- 491 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1980
Abstract
Many coal beds that will be mined in southeastern Montana are aquifers that provide essential local water supplies. Mine cuts along aquifer outcrops create almost imperceptible piezometric changes. Monitoring near such operations at Colstrip has detected almost no water-level declines in observation wells. Mine cuts between outcrops induce rapid storage depletion and associated piezometric depressions. One such cut near Decker induced 12.50 mj/day of flow from storage and created a piezometric depression of 3 m or more as far as 1500 m from the mine. No wells have yet become nonproductive but losses of some are inevitable as operations expand. Alternative supplies are available from aquifers stratigraphically below the disturbed materials. Effluents from active mines are chemically similar to other area waters because they are mixtures of ground waters entering the mine cuts. Occasional high concentrations of nitrate do occur, however, as residuals from explosives. Spoils generally consist of confined aquifers of wasted coal and coarse rubble at their bases, overlain by finer-grained sand,
Citation
APA:
(1980) Hydrologic Aspects of Strip Mining in the Subbituminous Coal Fields of Montana (8696a741-0a2b-4fce-a049-251c4c0f2db8)MLA: Hydrologic Aspects of Strip Mining in the Subbituminous Coal Fields of Montana (8696a741-0a2b-4fce-a049-251c4c0f2db8). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1980.