Heavy Metals In Our Watershed
This story was written by the Our Gem Collaborative team for the CDA Press on Sunday, June 21, 2020. Read the original article.
The headwaters of the Coeur d’Alene Basin are essential to the success of mining, timber, agriculture and hydropower industries. Mining activities along the South Fork of the Coeur d’Alene River have a significant influence on basin watershed conditions and on the welfare of its inhabitants.
From the 1880s to the early 1980s, the Silver Valley was the nation’s largest producer of silver, lead, zinc and other metals. The mining and ore processing methods used to extract this wealth produced tons of heavy metal waste containing toxic or environmentally hazardous substances such as cadmium, arsenic, lead and zinc. Much of this mining related waste was directly discharged into the South Fork and its tributaries.
The beds, banks and floodplains of the Coeur d’Alene River, Coeur d’Alene Lake and — to a lesser extent — the Spokane River, contain vast quantities of this waste that continue to be transported and dispersed by hydrologic processes and floods. Since the Spokane River recharges the Rathdrum Prairie Aquifer, these heavy metals could even contaminate this crucial drinking water source.
An estimated 75 to 83 million metric tons of heavy metal rich sediments from mining are deposited into the lakebed. (Horowitz, A.J. et.al., 1995, pp. 35-54). Water quality in the lake has generally improved since the mid-1970s, with the passing of the Clean Water Act. As the era of large-scale mining tapered off, environmental cleanup got underway in the Silver Valley, and environmental regulations were implemented throughout the basin. While advancements in mining practices limit or eliminate additional discharge of toxic heavy metals, significant challenges remain with persisting metal contamination that may be transported throughout the basin.
In 1983, the affected areas of the Coeur d’Alene basin were listed as a priority Superfund site by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), which stimulated efforts to remediate contamination. Metal contamination in Coeur d’Alene Lake continues to be monitored by the Coeur d’Alene Tribe and the Idaho Department of Environmental Quality. Efforts to engage the EPA to identify a remedy for the lake continue.
The primary environmental concern in Coeur d’Alene Lake is the potential for release of metal contaminants in lake-bottom sediments into the water column. To prevent this, oxygen levels must be maintained in the bottom waters. Oxygen is controlled by the amount of decomposing organic plant and animal matter which depends on the amount of nutrients coming into the lake. Increased loads of nutrients, like phosphorus and nitrogen, increase algae and rooted aquatic plant growth through a process known as eutrophication. Bacterial degradation of this organic material consumes dissolved oxygen in the water. Depletion of dissolved oxygen in lake-bottom waters will promote geochemical reactions that can release mining-related hazardous metals from lakebed sediments.
The basic strategy to prevent metal release from the lakebed into the water column is to limit basin-wide nutrient inputs to the lake. Acceleration of the eutrophication process occurs due to human activity and land use such as wastewater discharge, agricultural runoff, sediment runoff from unpaved roads and stream bank erosion, excess fertilizer, and shoreline development.
(Horowitz, A.J. et.al., 1995, Effect of Mining Related Activities on the Sediment Trace Element Geochemistry of Lake Coeur d’Alene, Idaho Part II-subsurface sediments: Hydrological Processes, vol. 9, pp. 35-54).