Monday,
November 8, 2021
6:00 - 7:30 pm
Note: ETGS members will receive an email with info for logging into the meeting.
November Presentation
Investigations at Abandoned
Mine Sites in the Rocky Mountains
By
Gareth J. Davies, TDEC (Retired)
Abstract
More than 23,000 abandoned mines are scattered all over the Colorado
Rocky Mountains. Groundwater accumulates in these mine workings, and
oxidized ore minerals produces a precipitate affectionately known as
"yellowboy". Most of these mine sites are at high altitude, 2,400 -
3,700 m (8,000 - 12,000 ft) above sea level, and in alpine
environments, with rapidly changeable weather (all four seasons in
any day), very steep terrain, snow fields, loose rocks etc. Going
inside the abandoned workings requires mine-safety training.
Drilling rigs were helicoptered into high narrow valleys, and we
spent time in wet, nasty, dark 130-year-old gold mines...an
unforgettable "work" experience. As a miner's son from Wales, I felt
quite at home, well...
The problem is that discharge from mine workings often impacts
surface streams, kills aquatic species, and loads surface water with
toxic heavy metals that eventually impact rivers. Many of the
workings are abandoned and collapsed, so the water buildup behind
blockages in drain tunnels freeze shut in winter, sometimes blowing
out during the spring thaw. The ice plugs can fly cross valleys. One
such event was the Gold King Mine above Silverton, CO which was not
a blowout per se but a consequential collapse of an attempt to solve
an inevitable potential blowout. The contamination from this event
flowed all the way to the Grand Canyon.
The contamination problem is typically located in a deep source of "stoped"
workings above the water table that discharge into drain tunnels.
Typically, ~400 mg/L of Zn and other metals are discharged at the
peak of snowmelt. The method we often began with was to trace (using
injected dyes) from accessible mine workings, but this does not
address the contaminated water from workings beyond the accessible
areas. The stoped areas are huge voids (mined out) and often too
dangerous to enter. In some cases, they have been excavated to the
upper parts of mountains and fill with permanent snow and ice plugs.
Some open in summer months and pose dangers to mountaineers and
skiers. Later, I used natural uranium as a tracer which would yield
data about water moving through the whole system. These data,
combined with USGS tracing of surface streams and stable isotope
data, support an attempt to describe the systems.
.
Biography
Gareth grew up in South Wales in a coal-mining community, next to a major karst area, and thus was interested in caves from the age of 15. He spent many years traveling in Asia, Europe, North America and Mexico exploring caves before marrying and moving to the US. He was awarded a BS degree from Millsaps College and an MS degree from the University of Southern Mississippi. His thesis dated speleothems from Tennessee cave using the uranium-thorium method. He moved to Oak Ridge and spent a couple of decades running his own company doing multiple tracer work from Puerto Rico to the US Rocky Mountains. After being a contractor, he later joined TDEC (now retired). He is a Fellow of the Geological Society of America.
Greetings! We hope you will join us for the next ETGS virtual meeting, and that you, your family, and your colleagues are staying healthy and well.
As a courtesy, please mute your cell phone or the microphone in your laptop/tablet to minimize background noise and feedback echoes. We will try to mute all participants until the presentation is finished. Please use the chat feature to type comments or questions during the presentation. We recommend that you send questions for the speaker to "everyone" so all participants can see the question. After the presentation, the speaker will answer questions. During this Q&A period, you may unmute if you wish to ask a question verbally.
We will create an attendance list based on the participant names we can see during the meeting. This is helpful for those who need to document participation to support Professional Geologist registrations. It is not always possible to tell who is participating, especially for those joining by phone, so please email your name to etgs@live.com to be listed on the attendance sheet. Let us know exactly how your name should appear on the list.
Thank you for your patience and understanding as we continue adapting to this virtual format. As always, we welcome and appreciate your feedback and suggestions for improvement.
Page updated October 27, 2021 |