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Dames & Moore, 1999 - USDA Forest Service

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. .. .<br />

.I.-<br />

..9<br />

6<br />

If water flow is available to dissolve weathering products on a mineral surface, then the rate of flow and<br />

flow variability become important considerations. At the ~klden Mime, flow of water is highly variable<br />

and results in significant seasonal variations in water quality associated with the source mas. These<br />

variations are illustrated conceptually in Figure 6.3-3. The sequence is shown as beginning in summer<br />

because this typically represents the time when accumulation of weathering products on mineral surfaces<br />

begins after extensive leaching by melt-waters in the spring. Summer is typically a dry season when little<br />

water infiltrates onto the surfaces of sources except during rain-storms. Under these conditions,<br />

weathering products accumulate on the surfaces of sulfide minerals but are not leached. Seepage water<br />

quality under these conditions typically represents groundwater baseflow, with little or no contribution<br />

from surface water drainage.<br />

In the fall, rainfall leads to infiltration of water on and into rock piles. The downward moving flow front<br />

dissolves weathering products that accumulated in the summer. The flow front contacts buffering<br />

minerals and pH increases. Since the water flow rate is relatively low and slow, conditions are optimal<br />

for raising pH by contact with weaker buffering minerals (such as silicates).<br />

In the winter, the formation of snow-pack ties up the moisture and causes flow to decrease again, and<br />

weathering products again begin to accumulate on mineral surfaces.<br />

Melting of the snowpack in spring leads to the release of relatively large volumes of water and thorough<br />

flushing (though never complete) of weathering products from mineral surfaces. The resulting solutions<br />

are acidic and contain high solute concentrations. Buffering minerals may be less effective in the spring<br />

than in the fall due to the inability to fully react with solute because the water is relatively fast moving.<br />

. . As the melt event proceeds, solute loads and concentrations both.increase. However, as weathering<br />

. products are leached, it is possible for. concentrations and loads to gradually decrease. This may occur in<br />

thin. relatively coarse deposits such as waste rock where leaching can be nearly complete and not<br />

... constrained by solubility of secondary minerals.<br />

--.-.:<br />

:' 63.3 ~atural Metal Removal Processes<br />

Weathering and leaching of mine workings, waste rock or tailings results in water with variable pH<br />

(depending on the degree of acid consumption) and elevated sulfate and metal concentrations. These<br />

leachates are produced in oxidizing to reducing environments by relatively slow moving groundwaters.<br />

Upon exiting the areas, the leachates are exposed to contact with an unlimited supply of oxygen,<br />

atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations, and mixing with dilute and frequently alkaline waters. Since<br />

these conditions differ from those in which the leachates formed, the solution chemistry adjusts<br />

(equilibrates) to the new condition. The following sections discuss these re-equilibration processes and<br />

the effect they have on concentrations of heavy metals in solution.<br />

The processes described include:<br />

Dilution.<br />

pH Control.<br />

Eh control.<br />

Efflorescence.<br />

17693-00~-01!lUul~ 27.<strong>1999</strong>;4:11 &R&FINAL RJ REPORT

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