A Zinc-Lead Ore Mine Water Contamination by a Paper Factory Fluid Waste
 
    
    - Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 8
- File Size:
- 509 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1988
Abstract
A case study of migration of a paper factory fluid wastes, on  the distance of 5 km from an underground disposal site to an ore  mine is presented. The ore mine in question, situated in SW  Poland is pumping 3.5 m3/s (ca 300 000 m3/day) of groundwater,  producing a cone of depression about 150 m deep and several  kilometers wide. The migration of wastes (pollutant) occurs  within the carbonate karstic aquifer of Triassic age. The aquifer  is about 100m thick and is characterized by the coefficient of  hydraulic conductivity equal to 8 m/day on the average. The results of systematic measurements carried out for 13  years enabled to estimate the mean breakthrough curve of the  pollutant. On this basis and taking into account the coefficient of hydraulic conductivity as well as the mean hydraulic gradient  between the disposal site and the ore mine, the migration  parameters of the polluting material, i.e. the real flow  velocity, the effective porosity and the longitudinal disper- sivity have been calculated. As the measurements considered a long migration distance of  the pollutant, the obtained hydrodynamic dispersion constant  (dispersivity), in the authors opinion, is reliable enough to be  applied for regional groundwater calculations, regardless of the  "scale effect".
Citation
APA: (1988) A Zinc-Lead Ore Mine Water Contamination by a Paper Factory Fluid Waste
MLA: A Zinc-Lead Ore Mine Water Contamination by a Paper Factory Fluid Waste. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1988.
