404-3 Biochar Application to Abandoned Mine Tailings: Managing Soils for Succession, Plant Growth, and Water Quality.

See more from this Division: S07 Forest, Range & Wildland Soils
See more from this Session: Soil Responses to and Ecosystem Services Provided by Forest, Range and Wildland Soil Management: II
Wednesday, October 24, 2012: 2:00 PM
Duke Energy Convention Center, Room 206, Level 2
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Charlene Kelly, Mark Stanton, Colleen Rostad and David Rutherford, USGS Denver, Denver, CO
Acidic drainage and associated toxic heavy metals emanating from waste rock piles at historic metal mining sites cause enormous and long-lived environmental problems.  These barren piles, which degrade water quality and impair growth of vegetation, are unstable, subject to erosion and mass failure, and are difficult and costly to remediate.  We are using laboratory column experiments designed to assess whether adding biochar made from beetle-killed pine wood to mine tailings is an effective approach for reclaiming abandoned mine lands.  Using tailings from two mine sites near Silverton, CO we investigated the hypotheses that incorporating biochar into acidic mine tailings would 1) decrease heavy metals in leaching solution, 2) improve activity and diversity of microbial populations that might promote natural ecosystem succession processes, and 3) improve overall conditions for plant growth and soil formation by increasing nutrient and water holding capacity, increasing pH, and decreasing compaction, concretion, and bioavailable heavy metal concentrations.  We also investigated the longevity of any ameliorating effects resulting from amending acidic mine tailings with biochar.
See more from this Division: S07 Forest, Range & Wildland Soils
See more from this Session: Soil Responses to and Ecosystem Services Provided by Forest, Range and Wildland Soil Management: II