OFR-104(2)-80 Selective Placement Of Coal Stripmine Overburden In Montana - II. Initial Field Demonstration

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 107
- File Size:
- 40041 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1977
Abstract
A week-long selective overburden handling dragline op ration was conducted at a strip mine near Colstrip, Montana. The objective of the demonstration was to hvdrologically isolate a saline overburden zone during placement in the spoil piles. The saline zone had concentrations considered inimical to successful reclamation and was potentially dangerous to future water quality in the spoils aquifer. The zone was identified after review of chemical data for overburden samples collected from the intense 60 m grid drilling pattern. The saline zone in the overburden was: 1) handled in a normal manner; 2) segregated and buried; and 3) segregated, buried, and covered with a relatively impermeable 1.0 m thick clay cap. The method used to formulate this demonstration, the demonstration itself, and the monitoring and evaluation techniques are described in this report. Observation wells were installed to monitor ground water in the overburden, Rosebud coal, and McKay coal. Data from these wells were, used to estimate post reclamation water levels and to evaluate recharge and water movement characteristics in the vicinity of the demonstrations. The inimical zone was successfully handled in a selective manner with a minimum of delays. Economic analysis indicated cost of these selective burial operations to be about 1.1 to 1.5 times the cost of the normal operation at this particular mine site. Long term monitoring will be required to evaluate the effectiveness of these handling techniques in hydrologically isolating undesirable overburden materials.
Citation
APA:
(1977) OFR-104(2)-80 Selective Placement Of Coal Stripmine Overburden In Montana - II. Initial Field DemonstrationMLA: OFR-104(2)-80 Selective Placement Of Coal Stripmine Overburden In Montana - II. Initial Field Demonstration. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1977.