Berkeley Pit Explained

Silver Bow Creek/Butte Area
City:Butte
County:Silver Bow
State:Montana
Location Map:USA#Montana
Map Label:Butte
Relief:y -->
Cerclis Id:MTD980502777
Contaminants:Arsenic, cadmium,
copper, zinc, lead
Proposed:30 December 1982
Listed:8 September 1983

The Berkeley Pit is a former open pit copper mine in the western United States, located in Butte, Montana. It is 1miles long by NaNmiles wide, with an approximate maximum depth of . It is filled to a depth of about with water that is acidic (4.1 - 4.5 pH level), about the acidity of beer or tomatoes.[1] As a result, the pit's water is laden with heavy metals and dissolved metals that leach from the rock in a natural process known as acid rock drainage. The dissolved metals include but are not limited to copper, arsenic, cadmium, zinc, and sulfuric acid.

The mine was opened in 1955 and operated by the Anaconda Copper Mining Company, and later by the Atlantic Richfield Company (ARCO), until its closure on April, 22 in 1982.[2] When the pit was closed, the water pumps in the nearby Kelley Mine, below the surface, were turned off, and groundwater began to slowly fill the Berkeley Pit, rising at about the rate of 1feet per month. Since its closure, the water level in the pit has risen to within of the "protective water level", above which the polluted water might flow into a nearby creek and other local water sources.[3] As a result, a water treatment plant has been operating at the site since October 2019.[4]

The Berkeley Pit can be visited by tourists, with a viewing stand and small visitor center.[5] [6]

History

The underground Berkeley Mine was located on a prominent vein extending to the southeast from the main Anaconda vein system (sometimes called "the richest hill on earth"[7]). When open pit mining operations began in July 1955, near the Berkeley Mine shaft, the older mine gave its name to the pit. The open-pit style of mining superseded underground operations because it was far more economical and much less dangerous than underground mining.

Within the first year of operation, the pit extracted 17,000 tons of ore per day at a grade of 0.75% copper. Ultimately, about 1,000,000,000 tons of material were mined from the Berkeley Pit. Copper was the principal metal produced, although other metals were also extracted, including silver and gold.[8]

Two communities and much of Butte's previously crowded east side were consumed by land purchases to expand the pit during the 1970s.[9] The Anaconda Company bought the homes, businesses and schools of the working-class communities of Meaderville, East Butte, and McQueen, east of the pit site. Many of these homes were either destroyed, buried, or moved to the southern end of Butte. Residents were compensated at market value for their acquired property.

Pollution, toxicity, and cleanup

The Berkeley Pit is located within the Butte Mine Flooding Operable Unit, a part of the Silver Bow Creek/Butte Area Environmental Protection Agency Superfund site.[10] The pit itself was added to the federal Superfund site list in 1987.

Water

The Berkeley Pit is a low spot and acts like a sump for contaminated water. For this reason, it is currently an active part of the remedy for this operable unit. A pilot water treatment project was initiated in 2019. It began treating and releasing Berkeley Pit water into Silver Bow Creek at the confluence with Blacktail Creek. This was done to protect the local groundwater from eventually becoming contaminated by rising pit water.[11] The plant cost $19 million and was designed to treat ten million gallons of water per day.[12]

Waterfowl

In 1996, 342 snow geese carcasses were recovered from the pit by researchers performing water quality testing. ARCO, the custodian of the pit, denied that the toxic water caused the death of the geese, attributing the deaths to an acute aspergillosis infection that may have been caused by a grain fungus, as substantiated by necropsy findings from Colorado State University. These findings were disputed by the State of Montana on the basis of its own lab tests.[13] Necropsies showed their esophagi were lined with burns and sores from exposure to acidic metalliferous water. As a result, waterfowl protection efforts were initiated.

On November 28, 2016, upwards of 60,000 snow geese landed in the pit during inclement weather. Once discovered, officials made efforts to haze the birds off of the pit's water and prevent more from landing in the area. Three to four thousand of the geese died. An official report issued in 2017 by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service found that the dead geese succumbed due to drinking the acidic metalliferous water.[14]

After this event, Atlantic Richfield (AR) and Montana Resources (MR) further enhanced the waterfowl protection efforts which had been in place since 1996. A new Waterfowl Protection Plan was developed and allowed for adaptive management, testing, and incorporation new tools and techniques. Deterrents such as Phoenix Wailers, a type of noise machine, and propane cannons that mimic gunshots are placed around the rim of the pit to keep birds from landing.[15] [16] When waterfowl do land on the surface of the pit, personnel use firearms, hand-held lasers, and unmanned craft to haze them.[17]

Protozoans

A protozoan species, Euglena mutabilis, was found to reside in the pit by Andrea A. Stierle and Donald B. Stierle, and the protozoans have been found to have adapted to the harsh conditions of the water. Intense competition for the limited resources caused these species to evolve the production of highly toxic compounds to improve survivability. Natural products such as berkeleydione, berkeleytrione,[18] and berkelic acid[19] have been isolated from these organisms which show selective activity against cancer cell lines. Some of these species ingest metals and are being investigated as an alternative means of cleaning the water.

Important dates

Geology

The mine is at an altitude of 4,698 feet (1432 m) above mean sea level. According to the Record of Decision, the pit water lever is not to exceed 5,410 feet above sea level.

The Butte mining district is characterized by the Late Cretaceous boulder batholith which metamorphosed surrounding rocks during the Laramide orogeny. Ore formation occurred with the intrusion of the Butte quartz monzonite pluton. Mining of sulfide minerals began in the district in 1864. Placer deposits were mined out by 1867. Silver vein lodes were then the most productive until copper was discovered in 1881. Open-pit mining started in 1955. Copper has historically been the main metal produced, though lead, zinc, manganese, silver and gold have been produced at various times.[24]

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Gammons & Icopini 2020 "Improvements to the Water Quality of the Berkeley Pit due to Copper Recovery and Sludge Disposal". Mine Water and the Environment, 2020.
  2. News: Anaconda to abandon Butte mine . Lewiston Morning Tribune . (Idaho) . Associated Press . April 24, 1982 . 4A.
  3. Web site: Protective Water Level . May 7, 2024 . PitWatch . Berkeley Pit Public Education Committee .
  4. Web site: Water Treatment . June 24, 2024 . PitWatch . Berkeley Pit Public Education Committee .
  5. Web site: Visit Us . June 24, 2024 . PitWatch . Berkeley Pit Public Education Committee.
  6. Web site: The Trolley . 2024-06-24 . Butte-Silver Bow Chamber of Commerce.
  7. Book: Copper Camp: The Lusty Story of Butte, Montana, the Richest Hill on Earth . Writers Project of Montana . 2001 . Riverbend Publishing . 978-1-931832-04-5 . en.
  8. Web site: Berkeley Pit History. Colorado State University, Department of Biology. 2009-02-21. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20090428152420/http://rydberg.biology.colostate.edu/Phytoremediation/2003/Boczon/Berkeley_Pit_History.html. 2009-04-28.
  9. Web site: Thornton. Tracy. March 13, 2016. McQueen photographs evoke bittersweet memories. 2020-07-07. Montana Standard. en.
  10. Web site: NASA - Berkeley Pit: Butte, Montana. www.nasa.gov. October 9, 2009.
  11. Web site: Saks . Nora . 2 October 2019 . Butte Reaches Superfund Milestone, Releasing Berkeley Pit Water Into Silver Bow Creek . 2020-08-10 . Montana Public Radio . en.
  12. Web site: Emeigh . John . 7 August 2019 . Berkeley Pit water treatment plant is almost operational . 13 July 2020 . kpax.com . KPAX-TV.
  13. Web site: Did toxic stew cook the goose?. November 18, 2018. High Country News. Adams, Duncan. December 11, 1995.
  14. News: Metals, acid in Berkeley Pit water killed geese, report confirms. November 18, 2018. Montana Standard. Dunlap, Susan. April 18, 2017.
  15. News: Thousands of Montana snow geese die after landing in toxic, acidic mine pit. November 18, 2018. The Washington Post. Guarino, Ben. December 7, 2016.
  16. News: Migratory birds shooed away by drone, fireworks, lasers. November 18, 2018. The Spokesman-Review. Associated Press. September 16, 2017.
  17. Web site: Saks. Nora. Most Montana Superfund Work Continues Despite Stay-At-Home Directive. 2020-08-10. Montana Public Radio. 10 April 2020 . en.
  18. Stierle . DB . Stierle . AA . Hobbs . JD . Stokken . J . Clardy . J . 2004 . Berkeleydione and Berkeleytrione, New Bioactive Metabolites from an Acid Mine Organism . Organic Letters . 6 . 6 . 1049–1052 . 10.1021/ol049852k . 15012097.
  19. Stierle . AA . Stierle . DB . Kelly . K . 2006 . Berkelic Acid, A Novel Spiroketal with Selective Anticancer Activity from an Acid Mine Waste Fungal Extremophile . The Journal of Organic Chemistry . 71 . 14 . 5357–5360 . 10.1021/jo060018d . 16808526.
  20. United States Environmental Protection Agency. (1994). EPA Superfund Record of Decision: Silver Bow Creek/Butte Area. Retrieved from https://semspub.epa.gov/work/08/1164465.pdf
  21. Gammons, C.H., & Duaime, T.E. (2020). The Berkeley Pit and surrounding mine waters of Butte. Geology of Montana--Special Topics: Montana Bureau of Mines and Geology Special Publication, 122. Retrieved from https://mbmg.mtech.edu/pdf/geologyvolume/GammonsDuaimeMineWatersFinal.pdf
  22. United States Environmental Protection Agency (2002, March 25). United States and Montana Reach Agreement with Mining Companies to Clean Up Berkeley Pit. [Press release] https://www.epa.gov/archive/epapages/newsroom_archive/newsreleases/746732fc9e0255f185256b88005adc40.html
  23. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and Montana Department of Environmental Quality. (2002). Explanation of Significant Differences: Butte Mining Flooding Operable Unit Silver Bow Creek/Butte Area NPL Site. https://semspub.epa.gov/work/08/1140014.pdf
  24. Book: Edwin W. Tooker . Gold in the Butte District, Montana in USGS Bulletin 1857 Gold in Copper Porphyry Copper Systems . United States Government Printing Office . 1990 . E17-E27.