Progress Toward A Deep Underground Science And Engineering Laboratory At The Homestake Mine In Lead, South Dakota

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Arden D. Davis Cathleen J. Webb
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
4
File Size:
167 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2005

Abstract

The Homestake Gold Mine at Lead, South Dakota, has been proposed as the host site for the Deep Underground Science and Engineering Laboratory. The laboratory will house neutrino experiments in mine workings at the 7400-foot depth, as well as research in geomicrobiology, rock mechanics, and ground-water flow. Initial plans for the laboratory were developed in 2000 after Homestake Mining Company announced the closing of the underground gold mine. Homestake’s owner, Barrick Gold Corporation, had agreed to donate the mine for a laboratory if it could be protected from environmental liability. That initial agreement was delayed, and Barrick turned off the mine’s pumps in 2003, allowing lower levels of workings to begin to flood with water. In early 2004, the Governor of South Dakota signed an agreement with Barrick that would indemnify the company and eventually transfer ownership of the mine to a state laboratory authority. South Dakota’s governor also announced plans to ask the state legislature for funds to help in the initial construction of the laboratory. A consortium of scientists from several states is currently preparing a detailed laboratory proposal for the National Science Foundation.
Citation

APA: Arden D. Davis Cathleen J. Webb  (2005)  Progress Toward A Deep Underground Science And Engineering Laboratory At The Homestake Mine In Lead, South Dakota

MLA: Arden D. Davis Cathleen J. Webb Progress Toward A Deep Underground Science And Engineering Laboratory At The Homestake Mine In Lead, South Dakota. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2005.

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