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BitterLittleFlower
09-02-2010, 07:03 AM
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/08/29/MNB11F0DKL.DTL

Inside a toxic hellhole, Iron Mountain Mine

Peter Fimrite, Chronicle Staff Writer

Sunday, August 29, 2010
Don Bader and Larry Ball of the Bureau of Reclamation pas... The Richmond Mill building dominates a hillside at Iron M... Jared Blumenfeld Region 9 Administrator of U.S. Environme... John Spitzley Project Manager for CH2M Hill explains the ... More...

(08-29) 04:00 PDT Redding --

A strange chemical smell lingered in the stifling heat as a group of environmental scientists groped in the darkness through one of the most polluted places on Earth.

The Iron Mountain Mine, outside of Redding, is a hellish pit where acid water sloshes against your boots, greenish bacterial slime gurgles out of the walls, and stalactites and stalagmites of acid salt, copper and iron jut out like rusty daggers.

"You don't want to splash this stuff," said Rick Sugarek, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's project manager for the Iron Mountain Superfund site. "This is the concentrated stuff."

The water - so acidic it could dissolve fabrics and burn skin - lapped against the rubber boots of the scientists, toxic-substance specialists, geologists and EPA officials who slopped in the dark toward the source of the toxic stew that created what experts describe as the "world's worst water."

"It's really kind of creepy," said Jane Vorpagel, a staff environmental scientist for the California Department of Fish and Game, who was seeing the slime-dripping cavern for the first time.

The recent mine tour was, in part, an attempt to familiarize Jared Blumenfeld, the Environmental Protection Agency's recently appointed regional administrator, with the worst of the 128 Superfund sites in his district.

But it was also a lesson on the extent of the damage humans are capable of inflicting on their environment and the innovative methods of resolving those problems.

The EPA has taken extraordinary measures to neutralize the toxic mixture that polluted the Sacramento River and its tributaries for more than a century.

The flow of pollution, which killed thousands of fish and did untold damage to the river habitat, is largely being held at bay and the damage has been contained. But the journey through the vile dungeon of the mine showed clearly that the danger will always remain.
Peak topped with rust

Iron Mountain, about 9 miles northwest of Redding, was once a majestic peak topped with red iron rust that suggested to miners in the 1860s that a little digging might reveal valuable copper.

A company called Mountain Copper established a 4,400-acre mine in the 1890s and began to supply sulfuric acid to refineries in the Bay Area. It became the largest copper mine in California by the turn of the century, and a small city of laborers lived on the mountain. Twenty cavities the size of office buildings were drilled into the rock.

The mining operation turned to rubble what was originally a 200-foot-thick by 3,000-foot-long underground deposit of pyrite, the metallic mineral known as fool's gold. The destruction of the mountain exposed the pyrite to oxygen, water and bacteria that combined to create poisonous runoff.

The result was the worst concentration of acid in the world, about 500 times more toxic than any other mine.

Today, dirt roads snake over and around the mountain. Treatment plants, holding ponds and dams are scattered about to catch the toxic runoff. The entire area is carved up. Rubble and large areas of bare reddish dirt pock the hills.

The primary source of the acid is inside a shaft on the side of a steep, barren hillside known as the Richmond Mine. The group that trekked into the bowels of this shaft was one of the first to ever go that deep; it included news media and other observers not directly involved in Superfund research.

Inside, the sound of bubbling and burbling is everywhere as water drips onto superheated rocks and turns into vapor. The chemical steam heats up the cavern and emits a strong odor. One visitor is told it might not be good to breathe the air there for extended periods of time.

This is what Sugarek calls "the belly of the beast," a place so hot and lacking in oxygen that it has to be pumped full of air so workers and visitors don't pass out.
Acid salts eat away

The Richmond tunnel is mostly covered with a fiber concrete that protects against collapse, but the acid salts eat away at the material deeper inside, exposing rotting old timber beams. Iridescent green copper stalactites jut down from above, and sparkling black mineral deposits known as Voltaite multiply over the rock walls, much of which is made of pyrite.

The tour group wore rubber boots and gear to protect against ever-present water that is so acidic even a droplet would eat a hole in blue jeans or dissolve the stitching on boots, much like battery acid. Splashing it on bare skin would cause "exfoliation," Sugarek said with a wry grin.

"This certainly seems like the mother lode of contaminated sites," Blumenfeld said. "It is our job to learn from this and make sure it never happens again."

Over the past year, workers dredged much of the 170,000 cubic yards of copper, cadmium, zinc and iron that had flowed out of the mine and accumulated for 50 years at the bottom of the Spring Creek arm of the Keswick Reservoir. The sediments were piped up to a newly built treatment facility that separated out the solids and neutralized the toxic metals, which were then dried out and secured in pits on nearby federal land.
98% of material contained

Sugarek, who has been in charge of the Superfund site for 20 years, said the management of toxic material will continue, but, to date, 98 percent of the toxic material has been captured and contained.

"Our main goal at the EPA was to protect the Sacramento River," Sugarek said. "A ton a day of copper and zinc used to hit the river. We have been able to reduce that to 2 percent of what it once was."
Chemical cauldron

The flow from this chemical cauldron into the Sacramento River and its tributaries was devastating, EPA officials said. Before the creeping acid was contained, it was as bad for the environment as 100 oil refineries pouring petroleum into a salmon spawning stream would have been, Sugarek said.

The Bureau of Reclamation built an earthen dam in 1963 to block the steady flow of sludge, but it would often overflow during heavy winter rains and the copper and metals would get into the Sacramento River.

The mine was finally abandoned in 1966 and collapsed in on itself shortly after that, but the problem only got worse. By the time the EPA took over management of the area in the 1980s, a ton of acidic water a day was flowing into the river and the water in the debris dam was blood red from the mixture of iron and copper.

In 1988, a sudden surge of power at a U.S. Bureau of Reclamation plant sent 2,000 cubic feet per second of metal-laden water flowing out of the Keswick Reservoir, turning the Sacramento River red all the way to Hamilton City, 100 miles away.
The leftover mess

Desperate, the EPA built the Slick Rock Creek Retention Dam in 2004, which captured most of the red sludge. Now the EPA is concentrating on the leftover mess, which is expected to cost the government $200 million to manage over 30 years.

A federal court recently held the owner of the mountain, Ted Arman, and Iron Mountain Mines Inc. liable for nearly $27 million in past cleanup costs and some $30 million in interest accrued over the years. The former owner, Rhône-Poulenc, which later became Aventis CropScience USA Inc., agreed to pay the federal government $154 million over 30 years in future cleanup costs.

Sugarek said the runoff can be captured, cleaned and turned into landfill for up to 100 years if the money is available. The problem is that the toxic broth will continue pouring out of the mine for 3,000 years until the pyrite is used up or someone figures out a way to neutralize the chemical and biological reactions, scientists say.
No solution - yet

"There is nothing that we have in the world today that solves this particular dilemma," Sugarek said. "What we can do is collect it and treat it and hope that in the next 30 years we have come up with new technology or techniques to resolve it."

At one point during the mine tour several members began edging into a cavern and were quickly alerted by EPA officials that it was not safe to go any farther. A sudden increase in temperature was immediately apparent at the mouth of this cavity.

The shaft leads into a place deeper inside where researchers recently found six unique strains of bacteria living in a bed of pink slime that are part of a little-understood biochemical cycle that devours iron, produces sulfuric acid, and creates a nightmarish broth of copper, zinc and arsenic.

There, the chemical reactions drive temperatures up to 130 degrees and the puddled water is sulfuric acid, concentrated enough to melt an aluminum ladder. Sugarek said the rocks inside this noxious horror house have been known to catch on fire from time to time.
Robot vanished

NASA once sent a robot in - and nobody ever saw the machine again or collected any scientific data from it, Sugarek said.

Scientists at NASA and UC Berkeley have not given up. They are studying the pink slime and what they believe is a primitive form of bacteria inside the mine, a substance so unusual that it can survive in laboratory-grade acid.

It is a measure of success, Blumenfeld said, that this toxic concoction is no longer pouring into the river.

"We've come across to the other side of the mountain," he said. "It is great to see that we can get back to a place where the water again runs clear. If you can clean up the Iron Mountain Mine, you can clean up anything."

E-mail Peter Fimrite at pfimrite@sfchronicle.com.

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/08/29/MNB11F0DKL.DTL

This article appeared on page A - 1 of the San Francisco Chronicle
© 2010 Hearst Communications Inc.

Posted for education purposes only...blf

BitterLittleFlower
09-03-2010, 01:02 PM
"The shaft leads into a place deeper inside where researchers recently found six unique strains of bacteria living in a bed of pink slime that are part of a little-understood biochemical cycle that devours iron, produces sulfuric acid, and creates a nightmarish broth of copper, zinc and arsenic."

I was just rereading this and it reminded me of a Vonnegut book, can't remember which, where this planet is actual a test lab for bacteriological growth...anyway, also reminded me about some comments some folks had about the bacteria in the gulf being able to eat all that oil.

And it also reminded me of a Simpson's episode due to humankind's propensity to make things worse somehow...

"Bart the Mother, from wikipedia

Plot

When Marge takes the family to the Family Fun Center, she notices Nelson acting like a bully, especially when he knocks Milhouse off the track and wins a BB gun from prize tickets. Bart and Nelson attempt to be friends, but Marge forbids Bart to hang out with Nelson. Bart goes to Nelson’s house anyway and starts using Nelson's new BB gun. When Nelson pressures Bart to shoot a bird in a nest, Bart accidentally kills the bird. Marge is furious that Bart killed an animal, but instead of punishing him, she refuses to have anything to do with his destructive ways. After Marge leaves Bart with Nelson, Bart discovers two eggs in a bird's nest. Since he does not want the babies to die like their mother, he decides to hatch the eggs, and secretly keeps the eggs warm in his treehouse. After Bart spends more time in his treehouse, Marge starts to suspect he is up to something. After Marge finds out what Bart has been doing, she tells him she is proud of him. With Marge's help, the eggs eventually hatch, but the Simpson family is shocked when instead of birds, a pair of lizards emerge from the eggs, who Bart names Chirpy Boy and Bart Jr.[2]

Bart and Marge take the lizards to the Springfield Birdwatching Society. Principal Skinner, a member of the society, explains that they are Bolivian tree lizards, a type of lizard that steals a bird’s eggs and leaves their own eggs to be watched after by the mother bird. Skinner says the lizards must be killed by law, because they have killed many bird species. Bart escapes and runs away with the lizards, but before he can get away, Skinner catches up to him and they both struggle on top of the building. Suddenly, the lizards glide to the ground, where they start to eradicate pigeons in Springfield. Since the town considered the pigeons to be a nuisance, they are delighted with the fact that the lizards have eaten all the pigeons. As a result, Bart is thanked and honored by Mayor Quimby with a loganberry scented candle. Lisa worries that the town will now become infested by lizards rather than the pigeons, but Skinner assures her that they will send in Chinese Needle Snakes, then snake-eating gorillas, and then "when wintertime rolls around, the gorillas simply freeze to death."[2]

blindpig
09-03-2010, 01:21 PM
and thoroughly illustrates the potential problems with 'biological controls'.
Pretty good for the Simpsons, worthy of Larsen(Far Side).

Sure do wish they'd figure out something that would work with fire ants and nothing else, they are a scourge.

BitterLittleFlower
09-05-2010, 10:47 AM
They had a least one LOL brilliant social comment per episode, though it was starting to get scant:

http://thumbnails.hulu.com/7/977/19839_512x288_manicured__vel2tsVKR0upY1Nck+Ku0g.jpg

Just submit to them damn bugs:

http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_Qii0RxMolYE/R5f-Ztr8ztI/AAAAAAAAARg/3MC6tvGt2cE/s400/hail-ants.jpg

brother cakes
09-05-2010, 11:00 AM
Yep...

BitterLittleFlower
09-05-2010, 11:19 AM
they've been on for over twenty years, and are making their next season...I just don't have tv reception anymore....

starry messenger
09-05-2010, 12:32 PM
http://wwwbrr.cr.usgs.gov/projects/GWC_chemtherm/photos/imred.jpg

I can't believe it ate a robot. o.O

Here's a little more on the bacteria living there. The whole thing sounds like science fiction.

http://www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2005/05/05_banfield.shtml



For some nine years, Banfield has been studying the microbial biofilm community at the Richmond Mine in Iron Mountain, Calif., nine miles northwest of Redding and one of the largest Superfund sites in the country. She hopes to understand how the organisms live together and interact with minerals to produce the hot, heavy-metal rich and highly acidic water that drains from the mine and contaminates surrounding streams. The film, which can form a tough sheet that is millimeters thick, sits atop green, 108 degree Fahrenheit runoff containing zinc, iron, copper and arsenic.

"This system is a very tightly coupled biogeochemical system, and we are just trying to find out how it works," she said.

"This microbial community is thriving at the extreme edge," added co-author Bob Hettich, a member of ORNL's Chemical Sciences Division. "A pH level of 0.8 is like swimming in sulfuric acid, so we'd like to know how this community can survive and how we might be able to use this information to better understand microbial systems in real-world conditions."

Bacteria, along with ancient microbes called Archaea, in the biofilm capture carbon and nitrogen from the atmosphere and derive energy from iron that has been leached out of the iron sulfide rock, also known as pyrite or "fool's gold." In the process, they produce sulfuric acid that leaches more iron from the pyrite and releases other heavy metals.

Last year's feat gave Banfield's team the nearly complete genomes of the five major bacteria in the biofilm, four of them new to science. The current study now provides nearly half the proteins predicted to be produced by the dominant bacteria, a Leptospirillum group II bacterium, and a smaller proportion from the other bacteria. The lesser coverage of the minor bacteria in the community is due in part because their genomes are more fragmented and in part because these bacteria are in lower concentrations, so their proteins are at correspondingly lower concentrations.
Pink biofilm floats atop green acidic drainage
The pink biofilm, a community of bacteria that thrives in an abandoned mine, floats atop green acidic drainage with a pH of about 0.8, which is equivalent to battery acid. (Photo by Jill Banfield/UC Berkeley)

"We identified 48 percent of the products of the genes encoded by the genome of the dominant organism. That's at least as good as most people do with proteomics on single organisms growing in the laboratory," Banfield said. "The exciting thing to me is we can start to study the organisms in situ, and that's really a big step forward."



http://www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2005/05/images/biofilm3.jpg

BitterLittleFlower
09-05-2010, 06:30 PM
looks like it might work well in a glaze formula...finally a good red... ;)

Pretty scary if you think about it though

starry messenger
09-05-2010, 08:28 PM
in raku for lusters. I'm *way* too chicken! It's pretty, but who ever thought that was a good idea? It used to be called vitriol by the alchemists. For good reason. :eek:

http://i83.servimg.com/u/f83/11/03/55/14/raku410.jpg

Two Americas
09-06-2010, 07:43 AM
Copper sulphate is extensively used in organic farming.

BitterLittleFlower
09-07-2010, 02:02 PM
copper carbonate is more subtle...Is that yours?

starry messenger
09-08-2010, 01:59 AM
I try to use stain instead of raw colorants. For raku, naked raku or minimal glaze. I'm already allergic to clay dust, eating chemicals and toxic fumes on top of that just seems like a bad idea. :)

BitterLittleFlower
09-08-2010, 05:12 PM
my lungs are shot to hell, tons of raku-ing, used to use commercial low fire under some copper, gave it a real old look, or a clear crackle...

I'm a bit older than you, tons of oil paint with my hands besides all the mud stuff...just throw me in a toxic dump when I'm gone, or, better yet make a bone glaze outta me!
n edit:
and I'm not even mentioning all the heavy metals from welding, cataracts from both welding and kilns can't be too far away either...