B.10 Peerless Jenny King Site Case Study

Upper Tenmile Creek, Helena MT

Acknowledgements

The team would like to acknowledge David Reisman, David Shanight, and Angela Frandsen from CDM Smith who submitted the Peerless Jenny King (PJK) Biochemical Reactors Case Study.

B.10.1 Site Information

Contacts

The USEPA remedial project manager for the Upper Tenmile Creek Mining Area Site is Tillman McAdams. The site contractor is CDM Smith, and the project manager is David Shanight.

Angela Frandsen

CDM Smith

50 W. 14th Street, Suite 200

Helena, Mt 59601

406-441-1435

[email protected]

Name, Location, and Site Description

The Upper Tenmile Creek Mining Area site is located in the Rimini Mining District, southwest of Helena, Montana. It consists of numerous abandoned and inactive hard-rock mine sites that produced gold, lead, zinc and copper. Mining began in the district before 1870 and continued through the 1920s. Little mining has been performed there since the early 1930s. USEPA added the Upper Tenmile Creek Mining Area Site to the Superfund National Priorities List on October 22, 1999, due to mining waste problems in the 53-square-mile watershed. The small historic mining community of Rimini is located within the Superfund site boundaries. The site includes the drainage basin of Tenmile Creek upstream of the Helena water treatment plant and includes tributaries that supply water to the plant's five intake pipelines. USEPA identified 150 individual mine sites within the watershed boundary, of which 70 have been prioritized for cleanup. Many of these mine features are above the five City of Helena drinking water intakes, which supply about 50 percent of the city's water.

The Peerless Jenny King (PJK) project site is named after three mines in the area of the discharging adit. Most likely this draining adit was connected to the original Peerless Mine. The adit is the major flow in this area, but smaller seeps can be seen coming from both hillsides.

B.10.2 Chemistry

The PJK biochemical reactor (BCR)An engineered treatment system that uses an organic substrate to drive microbial and chemical reactions to reduce concentration of metals, acidity, and sulfate in mining-influenced water. was designed and built by Jim Gusek of Sovereign Consulting Inc., David Reisman, USEPA Office of Research and Development, and a small contractor crew from the on-site contractor, Envirocon. The entire system was designed and built in less than 30 days at the end of the field season in 2003.

The adit discharge chemistry varies throughout the treatment system. Water flows from the adit continuously, but the flows increase during the spring as snow melt percolates into the mine workings and the adit flow increases to above 70 gpm. During the summer season the flow is usually in the 5-10 gpm range, but can increase with storm events.

In general, PJK adit water quality has a pH ranging from 5.7 to 6.8, an average specific conductance of 324 μS/cm, and is consistently aerobic. The adit water is dilute acid drainage with relatively low levels of metals. On average, the water contains zinc (up to several milligrams per liter), iron (0.42 mg/L), aluminum (0.062 mg/L), copper (0.036 mg/L), nickel (0.0066 mg/L), and cadmium (0.0074 mg/L). Zinc is the primary metal of concern at the site.

B.10.3 System Design

The treatment layout was designed to take advantage of natural treatment processes already occurring at the site, and to allow for adequate metal removal treatment in the limited area available. The treatment layout, shown on Figure B.10-1, consists of an aerobic iron depositional wetland, a cascading connector channel with some limestone, and four BCR cells in series, followed by emptying of the BCR effluent either by draining from the fourth cellAn individual unit in a treatment system. or percolation into the groundwater. All of the effluent eventually enters a lower natural wetland area where additional deposition and precipitation occurs.

 

Figure B.10-1. Schematic of the PJK bioreactor.

Mine drainage exits the adit and flows through a wetland in order to provide pretreatment and precipitate iron oxides. Hay bales are used as baffles in the wetland to help slow the flow rate. Several metal removal processes occur in aerobic wetlands including:

Pre-treated water then passes through a channel before entering four compost-based serpentine sulfate-reducing bioreactors in series. The BCR cells use bacteria to treat the semi-acidic metal-laden water. The cells are filled with an organic media mixture, which includes shredded wood and manure. The depth of the compost varies from 2 ft to 3 ft in the four reactors. Dairy manure was used as the bacterial inoculum. The mine influence water (MIW) pH was determined to be high enough to preclude the need for limestone to protect the sulfate reducing bacteria from excess acidity. Sulfates are typically about 100 mg/L and the pH is approximately 6.0 at the influent of the first bioreactor.

B.10.4 BCR Monitoring and performance

B.10.4.1 Sampling Locations

There are six surface water sampling locations throughout the treatment system as shown in Figure 1. Beginning at the adit and proceeding through the system, the sampling locations are listed below.

B.10.4.2 Data summary

Sampling and analysis of the PJK water has been done from 2003-2010, and some winter sampling has been done. Sampling at all the locations above was done bi-weekly for 2005-2006 after the BCR had been functioning for several years. A summary of the data follows.

B.10.4.3 Microbiological Study at Upper Tenmile

B.10.5 Regulatory Challenges

None.

B.10.6 Stakeholder Challenges

None.

B.10.7 References

Neculita, C.M., Zagury, G.J., and B. Bussiere. 2007. Passive Treatment of Acid Mine Drainage in Bioreactors Using Sulfate-reducing Bacteria: Critical Review and Research Needs. Journal of Environmental Quality. 36, p. 1-16. 2007.

Hiibel, S.R., Pereyra, L.P., Inman, L.Y., Tischer, A., Reisman, D.J., Reardon, K.F. and Pruden, A. (2008). Microbial Community Analysis of Two Field-scale Sulfate-reducing Bioreactors Treating Mine Drainage. Environmental Microbiology, 10(8), p. 2087-2097.

Reisman, D.J., V.J. Sundaram, S. Al-Abed, and D. Allen. 2007. Statistical Validation of Sulfate Quantification Methods Used for Analysis of Acid Mine Drainage. Talanta 71:303-311. 2007.

 

Publication Date: November 2013

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