Characterising mine wastes as archaeological landscapes

Author:

Lawrence Susan1,Davies Peter1ORCID,Hil Greg1ORCID,Rutherfurd Ian2,Grove James2,Turnbull Jodi1,Silvester Ewen3,Colombi Francesco3,Macklin Mark4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Archaeology and History La Trobe University Melbourne Australia

2. School of Geography, Earth and Atmospheric Science University of Melbourne Melbourne Australia

3. Centre for Freshwater Ecology La Trobe University Melbourne Australia

4. Centre for Water and Planetary Health University of Lincoln Lincoln UK

Abstract

AbstractIndustrial‐scale metal mining has long been a feature of developing economies. Processing ores to recover minerals has generated large quantities of waste rock, tailings and contaminants. Mining‐related deposits, along with associated soil and water geochemistry, river modifications and other environmental changes, are a product of the nature, scale and intensity of past operations. These artefacts of historical mining create anthropogenic landscapes that extend far beyond individual sites due to the dispersal of mine waste by rivers and pose enduring threats to human and ecosystem health. Their presence and significance, however, are often overlooked by heritage and environmental managers. To be acknowledged as artefacts of the historical mining industry, landscape features must be identified and characterised with reference to the human activities that triggered their formation. This requires an interdisciplinary approach that incorporates anthropogenic landscape change at a regional scale. In this paper, we integrate archaeological, geomorphological and geochemical evidence to identify and analyse mining‐related changes to the Loddon River valley in Victoria, Australia. Nineteenth‐century gold mining caused extensive erosion of creeks and gullies and mobilised sediments that filled channels and spread over floodplains. In addition, tailing deposits concentrated arsenic at levels significantly above environmental background conditions. Recognising these legacies of historical mining is vital to understanding mining heritage and to managing healthy rivers, environments and communities.

Funder

Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Archeology,Archeology

Reference108 articles.

1. Abernethy B. Markham A. Prosser I. &Wansbrough T.(2004). A sluggish recovery: the indelible marks of landuse change in the Loddon River catchment. InI.Wiszniewski M.Askey‐Doran R.Glazik &I.Rutherfurd(Eds.) Fourth Australian Stream Management Conference: Linking rivers to landscapes(pp.19–22). Department of Primary Industries Water and Environment.

2. De re metallica. Translated from the first Latin ed. of 1556, with biographical introd., annotations, and appendices upon the development of mining methods, metallurgical processes, geology, mineralogy & mining law fr

3. Alpers C. Hunerlach M. May J. &Hothem R.(2005).Mercury contamination from historical gold mining in California. Publications of the US Geological Survey Paper 61.

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