Topsoil Manufactured From Overburden, Sewage Sludge, And Spent-Bed Lime

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Jr. Stokowski
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
13
File Size:
1815 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1988

Abstract

Topsoil for revegetation projects is in demand in many urban areas. In this case history, a large aggregate producer manufactured a topsoil from three waste materials. The topsoil was produced in a 200,000 m2 (50-acre) abandoned gravel pit that still had additional gravel under 10 m (30 ft) of overburden uneconomic to strip directly. The topsoil was produced by rotary mixing of sludge, overburden, and a lime admixture; solar drying; and stripping and stockpiling of the product. A major problem was an increase of topsoil drying times for stripping from 40 to over 100 hours when it was rewet by storms. The problem was solved by a research project that evaluated over 50 formulations and over 20 waste materials. . The final formula dried in 15 hours and contained 3-parts sandy mine spoil, 1-part sewage sludge, and 2 % spent-bed, a granular quick-lime produced during power-plant flue-gas desulfurization.
Citation

APA: Jr. Stokowski  (1988)  Topsoil Manufactured From Overburden, Sewage Sludge, And Spent-Bed Lime

MLA: Jr. Stokowski Topsoil Manufactured From Overburden, Sewage Sludge, And Spent-Bed Lime. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1988.

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