OFR-104(4)-80 Selective Placement Of Coal Strip Mine Overburden In Montana - IV. Hydrogeologic Studies

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
D. J. Dollhopf
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
65
File Size:
20704 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1979

Abstract

This research was part of an effort to investigate means of reestablishing non¬polluted hydrological systems in areas where surface mining directly impacts shallow ground-water resources. Chemically undesirable overburden material was selectively backfilled with the intent that it would be below the future root zone, be above the reestablished aquifer, and would not be leached as a result of deep percolation. After 2 years the buried material remains above the spoil aquifer and below the maximum rooting depth. Unsaturated water flow from the land surface to the buried material occurred during wet climatological periods. No significant leaching of buried material was observed, however. Overburden sample contamination from drill stem joint grease with Pb, Zn, and Cu additives caused substantial error regarding DTPA extractable trace metals. A grease with teflon and talc additives was recommended for use in future sampling programs. DTPA extractable trace elements in overburden material had no statistical relationship to post-mine ground-water quality. Overburden columns leached with water produced leachates comparable to overburden and spoil ground-water trace metal quality. A depositional model described the Rosebud Coal overburden as a fluvial system with distinct units of sand, silt, and clay, with distinct chemical properties. Physical and chemical characteristics of the model were comparable to the in situ geochemical system, a relationship which may aid in locating overburden materials unsuitable for reclamation.
Citation

APA: D. J. Dollhopf  (1979)  OFR-104(4)-80 Selective Placement Of Coal Strip Mine Overburden In Montana - IV. Hydrogeologic Studies

MLA: D. J. Dollhopf OFR-104(4)-80 Selective Placement Of Coal Strip Mine Overburden In Montana - IV. Hydrogeologic Studies. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1979.

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