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Erschienen in: Environmental Earth Sciences 2/2014

01.07.2014 | Original Article

Laboratory testing of trace metals removal from mine drainage and arsenic removal from groundwater in the Black Hills of South Dakota

verfasst von: Arden D. Davis, Cathleen J. Webb, Jenifer L. Sorensen, David J. Dixon, Haile Betemariam

Erschienen in: Environmental Earth Sciences | Ausgabe 2/2014

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Abstract

The Gilt Edge Superfund Site is a former heap-leach gold mine that currently is being remediated in the Black Hills of South Dakota. Mine runoff water is treated before release from the site. The field pH, before treatment, is about 3; the water contains arsenic at low levels and some trace metals at elevated levels, in addition to total dissolved solids concentrations of more than 1,900 mg/L. In the Keystone area of the Black Hills, naturally occurring arsenic has been detected at elevated concentrations in groundwater samples from wells. The City of Keystone’s Roy Street Well, which is not used currently, showed arsenic concentrations of 36 parts per billion and total dissolved solids of 320 mg/L. With field samples of water from the Gilt Edge site, a limestone-based method was successful in reducing trace metals concentrations to about 0.001 mg/L or less; at the Keystone site, the limestone method reduced arsenic levels to about 0.006 mg/L. The results are significant because previous research with the limestone-based method mainly had involved samples prepared with distilled water in the laboratory, in which interference of other ions such as sulfate did not occur. The research indicates the potential for broader applications of the limestone-based removal method, including scale-up work at field sites for water treatment.

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Metadaten
Titel
Laboratory testing of trace metals removal from mine drainage and arsenic removal from groundwater in the Black Hills of South Dakota
verfasst von
Arden D. Davis
Cathleen J. Webb
Jenifer L. Sorensen
David J. Dixon
Haile Betemariam
Publikationsdatum
01.07.2014
Verlag
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Erschienen in
Environmental Earth Sciences / Ausgabe 2/2014
Print ISSN: 1866-6280
Elektronische ISSN: 1866-6299
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12665-013-2956-0

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