Ask Slashdot: Can Tech Help Monitor or Mitigate a Mine-Flooded Ecosystem?
An anonymous reader writes "The dam break which flooded toxic mining sediments into Quesnel Lake, British Columbia will affect the food web of a very important fisheries ecosystem for many years to come. Here is the challenge; I am asking the people here to come up with suggestions for new and inventive ways to monitor and or help mitigate this horrendous ecological disaster. A large portion of a huge world famous food and sport fishery is at stake. The challenges ahead will take thinking outside the box and might not just be effectively done by conventional means." What would you do, and what kind of budget would it take?
If only there were entire fields of research that dealt with precisely this sort of monitoring.
some toxins can't be processed by biological systems. (and accummulates in (the food of)* our food) (that's called a time-bomb)
Yes, I'm left. You have a problem with that?
There used to be an environmental company here in the US that held a patent on in-situ treatment of chromium-6 comtaminated groundwater. They injected a heavy molassus syrup. This provided sugar for bacteria to eat, with a wee bit of sulfer. The net result was the bacteria ate the sugar and combined the Cr-6+ with the sulfur to form a highly insoluable sulfide.
This may work on several of the metals in the soup here.
throw the ones responsible into jail for a long ass time to make a nice example. You can't hide behind money and corporations. Take away enough of their profits to just keep them ging and keep the emplayees working.
by TheSpoom (715771) Uncaring Linux user here. I have nothing to add to this but please continue. *munches popcorn*
Ask Slashdot. Instead I'd go to forums where actual field ecologists -- the ones who actually go out and sample water, etc -- to see what they suggest.
Solutions don't have to come from field ecology. Here are two solutions:
1. Don't allow earthen dammed tailing ponds to be built upstream from pristine ecosystems.
2. Instead of mining gold, we should all switch to Bitcoins.
First: Do no (more) harm
One of the lessons from the Exxon Valdez oil spill is that attempts to clean things up may make them far worse, while the ecology's toughness in the face of environmental changes is vastly underrated.
For instance: They did a major removal of oil from part of a beach. In the process they stripped the bulk of the lifeforms off, leaving essentially sand - mineral dust. In an adjacent section that was missed, the orgnisms did a fine job of consuming the oil that had spilled. (It seems sea life has to deal with seeped oil quite a bit, from natural sources. Some stuff not only handles it, but considers it a valuable resource.). After a couple years the un-cleaned beach was flourishing (though perhaps not with the same mix of populations as before). A picture of the boundary is impressive: Cut like a knife.
Granted disturbing mine tailings is a very different case. But similar rules apply: Will letting them settle to the bottom, where they can be processed over decades to geologic time, cause less harm than attempting to clean them up RIGHT NOW - which might keep them mixed into the water and produce a much larger, sustained, iinput of "toxic" minerals to the bulk of the waterway's biosphere?
Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
Gold is used throughout industry. Attempting to use Bitcoins in place of it would be a really neat trick.
All the tests so far mean is that the any of the toxicity that is in the sludge that got dumped from the tailings pond isn't leeching into the water itself, because the pH balance is good enough. The silt itself, however, is still actually *IN* the water, and its presence may pose a longer-term threat to human life and wildlife in the region if it can't be cleaned up.
File under 'M' for 'Manic ranting'
Why is this post in Lisp?
PlusFive Slashdot reader for Android. Can post comments.
Do nothing and monitor the situation for a few generations.
and how long does it take to go through all the comments and clicking all the goatse links?
Where will you get the gold used in all the chips in the computers to mine bitcoins?
I just bought Bitcoin-plated TOSLINK cables and the sound quality is fantastic!
Get free satoshi (Bitcoin) and Dogecoins
Another AC with a moronic statement. I guess you never heard of noodling. By the way, there is a reason we make tools.
Despite the fact that it's a commonly-held belief in the scientific community that, at least in part, we walk because we were shore-based waders, that our brain development was linked heavily with consumption of fish and fish oils, and that there are still entire communities that with the help of a simple tool (a net, or even just a series of wooden stakes in the rivers/oceans), they can capture enough food to sustain themselves indefinitely?
Wanna take down a cow single-handed? Good luck. Seen what a carrot looks like before the modern age of fertilizers and heavy cross-breeding? Want to see the effort involved in turning wheat into something you can actually eat?
Don't talk bollocks.
I suggest we submit that as an "Ask Slashdot" question.
Get free satoshi (Bitcoin) and Dogecoins
You forgot Arduino and Bitcoin.
Get free satoshi (Bitcoin) and Dogecoins
How can you tell when fish goes bad, it smells like fish either way! "Mmmh this smells like a dumpster, let's eat it!" - Jim Gaffigan
Get free satoshi (Bitcoin) and Dogecoins
It won't help for this disaster, but if you want to prevent it from happening again make sure all the CEOs and other management types who cut corners such that this failure could happen spend a healthy dose of time in prison. Ditto the environmental regulators who gave a passing grade to a high-risk situation. Maybe extract the clean-up costs from their personal assets as well - let's liquidate everything they own and garnish 75% of their income until all clean-up has been paid for or they die of old age. Because as long as the folks in charge can pocket their fat cost-cutting bonuses and then walk away unscathed from the consequences of their actions while a piece of paper (aka corporate charter) has its day in court this will just keep happening.
As far as this disaster is concerned I've got nothing non-obvious to contribute. My condolences to everyone downstream.
--- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
We have way more gold in storage than we have an industrial or jewelry-related use for. The primary use for gold is to sit in Fort Knox doing nothing at all. Gold-coloured plastic would do that job just as well.
Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
Gold is used throughout industry. Attempting to use Bitcoins in place of it would be a really neat trick.
Only 10% of gold production goes to industry. The rest goes to either jewelry or investment. Much of the jewelry is sold in India, where it is used by families as a store of value. If India had a better banking system, the demand for gold might fall by quite a bit.
Where will you get the gold used in all the chips in the computers to mine bitcoins?
There is enough gold sitting in vaults to last for centuries at current industrial consumption rates. After that, we can get more by mining asteroids.
Remember "So long and thanks for all the fish"?
What happens if it's just 'so long'? Did you ever stop to thing about that?
Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
Based on seeing the angst of my Indian friend when he was shopping for gold gifts for his family, there's a lot more cultural meaning than mere stored value.
Sonar fish counting works well for spawning fish in rivers. Salmon are typically counted this way because they all come up from the sea to spawn. Populations that live their entire lives in rivers or lakes would be much harder to count using this technique. Unfortunately, the only really accurate way to count the number of fish in a lake or pond is to dynamite it and count them as they float to the surface, subtract the number that stay floating and hope everybody else just has a headache.
Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
specifically, use reverse osmosis and other separation methods to get all the pollution out of the huge lake... and drop it in the living rooms of the board of directors of the company that caused the spill.
if this is supposed to be a new economy, how come they still want my old fashioned money?
TFA doesn't say what caused the dam break, sometimes it's actually nobody's fault, ie: "shit happens". However the cause should be thoroughly investigated by forensic engineers and if it was negligence, then jail the negligent, which in the eyes of law is normally the principal engineer who signed off on the construction, "following PHB orders" is not a valid excuse in the eyes of the law.
And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
All of the above. Plus dissolve the company, maybe offering some of the better now un-employees jobs on the cleanup staff.
That would send a message about fuckups of this level, ensure this particular place is no longer a potential issue, and hopefully keep plenty of the workers employed until cleanup winds down so they can find work elsewhere.
According to Wikipedia the waste pond contained about 18,000 tons of copper and a few hundred tons of other elements. Typically, sulphide ore deposits will include cadmium, lead, and arsenic, all pretty toxic.
We take copper pretty much for granted, but it's compounds are actually quite toxic. With the large amounts present I would put measurement of copper contamination pretty high on the agenda, and look to setup an independent lab to measure copper compounds in the water entering the lake, along with cadmium and arsenic. If we're lucky, the anaerobic conditions in the pond will mean that most of the heavy metals will be locked up as insoluble sulphides, but we can't take this for granted.
The fine particulates which have already entered the lake water are out of our control, and the majority will settle out over the winter when there is very little water movement. The next big influx is likely to come with the spring thaw, so remediation efforts should focus on either excavating or stabilising the deposited material downstream of the pond before winter sets in. Thereby minimising the additional contamination when the snow melts.
Just my thoughts,
Keith.
Exactly. The sludge that has entered the river and lake has not yet been converted into forms that permit ready uptake by plants (and from the plants to the fish and other animals in the lake and up the food chain from there). There's no assurance that it won't undergo that chemical change, and attempts to remove the sludge using current technologies are sloppy enough that, while they would remove most of the sludge, they'll spread the rest more widely.
It's not nice to point out someone's Lisp.
--- Keep the choice with the user..
That's a good one.
I don't see rappers wearing Bitcoin bling, although the grilles would be very interesting.
You are welcome on my lawn.
Ti think that's wrong. Isn't there a lot more gold used in jewelry in South Asia than is sitting in Ft Knox? I thought I'd heard that.
You are welcome on my lawn.
Unless they have nice plump red lisp like Algenina Jolei
You are welcome on my lawn.
Determine the boundary of the contaminated-sediment area. Pump cement in there, to make toxic concrete. Once it sets up, pull it out.
wheat, soybeans, milk or eggs and eating same with your "bare hands and mouth". You think the line is drawn at fish?
"Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
Can Tech Help Monitor or Mitigate a Mine-Flooded Ecosystem?
Yes, of course it can.
How? Oh, no idea. I'm just sure it can.
systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
There is evidence that the company ignored warrning from the engineering company that built the projects and the pond had to be fortified or there would be issues in the future. The engineering company says they let the management and the gov know there will be issues if things didn't get fixed. No one listened so they bailed before this hit the fan and eventually it did.
by TheSpoom (715771) Uncaring Linux user here. I have nothing to add to this but please continue. *munches popcorn*
from the company and gove that ingnored the warrning from the engineering company that built the project that the current setup wasn't future proof.
by TheSpoom (715771) Uncaring Linux user here. I have nothing to add to this but please continue. *munches popcorn*
NO mine wants a tailings dam to collapse. There are regular conferences on how to design the things and specialists who design them. NO CEO wants this to happen, because the cost reparations is horrendous, and contrary to what the comments have been like here, the bosses of these companies (well the ones I've know of) want to be good corporate citizens.
Mining has risks, and incidents like this will ne analysed and fed back into the future design models, and like all things in life, will improve over time.
46137
First, make the company clean up their mess, with a suitable plan signed off by some ecologists. Make sure the clean-up will 1) be better than doing nothing and 2) accomplish its objective.
Whatever money you want to spend to clean up a disaster like this would be better spent finding other potential disasters and making sure they don't happen, rather than donating your money to save a greedy corporation from their responsibility and encouraging other companies to save money by having suckers clean up their messes.
Don't waste your vote! Vote for whoever you want, unless you live in a swing state it won't matter anyways
In what form are they? In solution? That's a tough problem to solve. As particulates, it may be possible to separate much of them out.
Dam Polley Lake and divert its outflow through centrifugal separators*. That will concentrate the particulates, which can be sent to temporary holding ponds and further separation.
*I wonder if the availale head from Polley Lake can be made to drive some sort of cyclonic seperator without the use of other power input.
Have gnu, will travel.
Goatse.cx has been down for a while, but now you can see a more feminine version of goatse at http://www.xvideos.com/video13...
Old hand cranked phones are great for fishing, er fish counts.
You drop the wires in at opposite end of the boat, crank the generator while say 'hello fish, come on up' and they all float to the surface, stunned. You pick out the good eaters and the rest recover and swim away.
I mean the ranger counts the fish, sorry.
John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
I was just gonna say that. It's like after a volcanic eruption, how much would it cost to clean up all the lava and plant back the previous vegetation? Nickel, copper, arsenic and lead are not that bad, compared to, say, mercury, and a good volcanic eruption has just as much of that stuff. By the way they might have to load that lake water with rotten eggs, and some mild hydrogen sulfide conditions, that catches the arsenic as realgar, and all the copper as sulfide, though it's less effective with nickel and lead. But nickel is not that bad, and even lead is nowhere near as bad as methyl mercury. I don't know what the local fauna and flora would prefer though in the lake, to put up with the toxins themselves, of to put up with the hydrogen sulfide treatment instead, or any kind of chelation therapy treatment that also messes them up, and I think what's done it's done, and they'd like to be left alone, please. Just be careful next time.. Nature will find a way. What I'd like to know is what about them gazillion tons of toxins buried in every nations landfills, that are plastic lined, with holes on every one without exception, and groundwater leaks and river leaks? Who's gonna mine those and clean those up. In reality, we cannot environmentally afford cities, because of all the trash. If people lived as yeoman farmers, and there was no trash collection, there would be no trash, and people would find ways to reuse, like all the food waste recycled as manure instead of going into the trash like in a city apartment, or incinerate themselves in a hillbilly billow drum, like plastic and cardboard. Otherwise waste always fills the available space for it.
Can Tech Help Monitor or Mitigate a Mine-Flooded Ecosystem?
Yes. The first tech to start out with is a motorboat, a Van Dorn bottle, and a sediment sampler. Then pick out a lab or two that are capable of testing for the things that might be in the water, particularly nickel, arsenic, lead, copper, TSS, phosphorus, and nitrogen. Take your water samples at several locations and depths using said motorboat with said Van Dorn bottle and sediment sampler.
Okay, okay, I was kinda being a smartass. I get it, you have 5 days to complete your detailed action plan, and in a desperate Hail Mary you're hoping somebody here will reply with, "I was just about to launch my Kickstarter project for my solar powered 3-D printed heavy-metal-cleaning-superdrone running Linux on Raspberry Pi! I'll UPS my prototype to you tomorrow!" But that's not gonna happen. I'm sure you've already hired consultants to write things like, "if levels of A are above B mcg/L then C will be done over D timespan, until levels of A drop below B, at which point E will be done." D and E may have to be investigated if you don't know what they are yet. That's about as good as you're gonna get at this point.
Don't forget that your spill probably didn't just contaminate the lake with the metals you dumped in it, but also normal things (i.e. nutrients) that tons of sediment contain that could have various biological effects such as algal blooms. In addition to supplying them with clean water, I hope your mining company also reimburses the residents of the area for the economic (both short term and long term) impact this incident is having on them. You've been reaping the benefit of the rewards, now it's time to pay the price of the risk.
Recent (several years) Congressional efforts to examine the contents of Fort Knox and other U.S. government gold reserves, and the gold of other countries that the US holds in trust, have been rebuffed. Germany has been refused access to its gold that is held by the U.S.
There is good reason to believe that for all practical purposes, Fort Knox is empty. The gold has either been stolen by groups within the US government, or used by the government itself to pay off overdue debts.
We are well and truly screwed.
Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
Nice deflection with euphemisms. "Public control" in your context is government control; and as soon as the publicity goes away you've created a self-perpetuating incompetent bureaucracy that will not do its job.
Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
Quesnel Lake is 100 square miles, and the second deepest lake in Canada. If something has to be done that involves the whole volume of the lake or all of the lake floor, it's a very big project no matter how clever the solution.
Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
First suggestion:
There's been a lot of interest in using Zeolites to absorb heavy metal contamination in water. One specific experiment involved dragging a bag of zeolites through ocean water, the zeolites absorbed enough Thorium to be industrially useful as an ore (if there were a demand for Thorium, which there isn't).
I've found papers that indicate that Zeolites will absorb copper and lead, two of the contaminants listed for the Mount Polley disaster; chances are likely that zeolites would absorb the other contaminants as well.
Here's two papers to get you started:
http://www.yourncdinfo.com/cli...
http://cnu.edu/arc/documents/p...
Second suggestion:
There's been some success in removing non-volatile organic pollutants from soil using steam injection. Essentially, sink a pipe into the soil, inject steam, cover the area with a tarp, and collect the steam/water as it percolates up through the soil. This method can be used to extract non-volatile organic components including tetra-ethyl-lead. (I found that last bit surprising, but this was directly confirmed to me by one of the scientists involved.)
Depending on the chemical nature of the contaminants (ie - solubility, polar/non-polar character &c) this might prove useful in decontaminating some of the mud slurry.
Here's a paper to get you started:
http://nepis.epa.gov/Adobe/PDF...
However,toxins can only be produced by biological systems and thus are irrelevant to the discussion of toxic mining tailings.
Third suggestion:
Fungi can be used to remove heavy metal contaminants in flowing water. Place a bunch of fungi mycelium in sandbags in the water stream and the fungi will filter out the contaminants as the water flows through. Come back later, remove the bags and replace with a fresh batch.
Contact Paul Stamets' group over at Fingi Perfecti and see what their experts have to say. They might even have a product you could buy for the purpose.
Here's a paper and some contact info to get you started:
http://www.sciencedirect.com/s...
http://www.fungi.com/about-pau...
To go further down that road: All assets are immediately turned over to the government and used to fund cleanup and mitigation. The government becomes the most preferred creditor.
I would go to chemists and molecular engineers. If you consider the lake sufficiently toxic that you can not allow time to resolve all issues and draining the lack and digging out the toxic lake bed and disposing of it is too expensive, then review the toxic chemicals and see what stable harmless molecules they can be converted into by apply other less harmful chemicals in saturation that nature over time can bind up. Ecologists are just going to tell you don't do it, for good reason. Large earth moving contractors of course will tell exactly how expensive it really is to clean up toxic waste spills 'properly'. You sort of have to suck it up. In being stupid enough as a community to allow it to happen, you have basically initiated a large scale chemistry experiment, how you deal with it becomes trial and error until it is resolved or you have spent all the money available to fix it with out actually fixing it.
Realistic answer is move and move far enough away that you reach a community that is smart enough to prevent it happening.
Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
There's more gold in my mothers wedding ring than there is in Ft Knox.
Just ask the Germans what happened to their request for their gold stored in the US...
Just ask the Germans what happened to their request for their gold stored in the US.
Are there any "THE GOLD IS MISSING WERE DOOOOOOOOMED!!!" sites that are not scaremongers?
"I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
http://tintuc.oho.vn/news/c180...
https://plus.google.com/101541...
As someone towards the beginning of the comments said, sometimes stuff happens. Maybe there was and maybe there wasn't corner cutting and/or poor engineering in this tragic situation. The take-away here for me is that we simply should not put these big mines in ecologically sensitive areas. Stuff will happen without regard to the best laid plans and intentions of mine developers. The Fraser river salmon may take a terrible hit from this pond breach. The proposed Pebble Mine is threatening the Bristol Bay area of Alaska, home to the worlds largest red salmon run, with a 700+ foot tall earthen dam upstream from major rivers, holding back a 4 mile long tailings and leach pond.
Oh thank you so much! I'll spread the news to colleagues. I think it's more important than the FA.
Mine gold from asteroids? Oh wow, that gold will be golden.
Make it a game. Could you set up a virtual environment? Perhaps you can find an area where people explore the border of a habitat in the condition it "should be in" in the game. When they see an area with a problem, they can run chemical test which actually runs an actual chemicals test in the affected area. Perhaps since actual fish are affected, you can make it a virtual fishing game. Tough to say since I don't really know what all is involved in the actual clean up process.
The CEOs and anyone else in charge has already made sure that can never happen to them. They employ a variety of tricks to avoid being blamed for anything.
For example, they might hire a consultancy firm to tell them if what they are doing is safe. The job of the consultancy firm is to tell the people paying them what they want to hear, and maybe make a few easy low-cost recommendations so that the company can show how hard it is trying. Their contract explicitly states that they don't stand by any of it, and if the worst happens it definitely isn't the consultancy company's fault. The CEOs can say that they took the "best" advice available to them, because obviously they are clueless morons who know nothing about engineering so just take on what people tell them at face value. Suddenly there is no-one to blame, at least from a legal stand point. I mean, you could try, if you had millions of dollars and a couple of decades to fight it out with them, but you would probably lose.
At best you could try to pass a law that holds the company responsible, but getting those who were really to blame though greed and disregard for safety is nigh on impossible. They spend a great deal of time and money making sure of that.
const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
There are a host of plants that will absorb heavy metal contamination, however the problem is that using them in this way is prevent by patents.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P...
http://www.google.co.uk/patent...
Well, it was kind of creepy to ask Ft Knox to store all those teeth.
You are welcome on my lawn.
I work in a kitchen, where this sort of behavior would result in a forced closure and heavy fines. If I throw a few hundred pounds of chicken in an oven, I clean the surface I prepped them on. I do NOT wait until a disaster whips the stuff around and covers the whole kitchen with salmonella. While the contaminants are localized, they're easy to clean up. When disaster spreads them around, cleanup becomes nearly impossible.
In the mining context, we can't be leaving giant holes covered with contaminants just waiting for a storm! We know that a storm will come eventually. So we shouldn't fine companies for their failure after a disaster, we should send inspectors during normal operation to make sure they're meeting standards that will prevent disaster.
We need to do this because fining companies after a disaster will encourage them to minimize the financial effect of disaster, which may or may not involve behaviors that would prevent it in the first place. If the disaster rate is low enough, it could encourage them to set aside a fine-fund and make zero allowance for prevention. But if we penalize them for failure to prevent disaster in the first place, we'll be encouraging the behaviors we want to see.
Its a classic 'be careful what you wish for' problem.
There's a legend that once upon a time the captain always went down with the ship, and there were a lot of reasons why that would be a very good thing - *somebody* has to carry final responsibility, and the only one who can reasonably do so is the person with final authority. It's up to them to stay on top of everything they should be aware of, and if they fail in their duty they pay the ultimate price. Similar theme with sepukku in Japan - the person ultimately responsible for failure pays the price.
Seems perfectly reasonable to me to change the law so that modern CEOs do something similar - make them personally liable for the actions of the company on their watch, There's a good argument to be made for having a corporate veil to protect investors, but none at all for protecting the guy (or gal) calling the shots.
Of course to do change the law like that we'd have to first take back control of our government, and for now at least it seems the will to do so doesn't exist.
--- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.