Abstract
Erosion of rehabilitated mines may result in landform instability, which in
turn may result in exposure of encapsulated contaminants, elevated sediment
delivery at catchment outlets, and subsequent degradation of downstream water
quality. Rehabilitation design can be assessed using erosion and hydrology
models calibrated to mine site conditions. Incision rates in containment
structures can be quantified using 3-dimensional landform evolution simulation
techniques. Sediment delivery at catchment outlets for various landform
amelioration techniques can be predicted using process-based and empirical
erosion-prediction models and sediment delivery ratios. The predicted sediment
delivery can be used to estimate an average annual stream sediment load that
can, in turn, be used to assess water quality impacts. Application of these
techniques is demonstrated through a case study applied to a proposed
rehabilitation design option for the Energy Resources of Australia Ltd (ERA)
Ranger Mine in the Northern Territory of Australia.
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Soil Science,Environmental Science (miscellaneous)
Cited by
61 articles.
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