Silver Bow Creek/Butte Area | |
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Superfund site | |
Berkeley Pit and Yankee Doodle tailings pond with terraced levels/access roadways (left side of image is approximately north).
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Geography | |
City | Butte |
County | Silver Bow County |
State | Montana |
Coordinates | 46°01′02.38″N 112°30′36.60″W / 46.0173278°N 112.5101667°WCoordinates: 46°01′02.38″N 112°30′36.60″W / 46.0173278°N 112.5101667°W |
Berkeley Pit's location in Montana. | |
Information | |
CERCLIS ID | MTD980502777 |
Contaminants | Arsenic, cadmium, copper, zinc, lead |
Progress | |
Proposed | 12/30/1982 |
Listed | 09/08/1983 |
List of Superfund sites |
The Berkeley Pit is a former open pit copper mine located in Butte, Montana, United States. It is one mile long by half a mile wide with an approximate depth of 1,780 feet (540 m). It is filled to a depth of about 900 feet (270 m) with water that is heavily acidic (2.5 pH level), about the acidity of cola or lemon juice. As a result, the pit is laden with heavy metals and dangerous chemicals that leach from the rock, including copper, arsenic, cadmium, zinc, and sulfuric acid.
The mine was opened in 1955 and operated by Anaconda Copper and later by the Atlantic Richfield Company (ARCO), until its closure on Earth Day 1982. When the pit was closed, the water pumps in the nearby Kelley Mine, 3,800 feet below the surface, were turned off, and groundwater from the surrounding aquifers began to slowly fill the pit, rising at about the rate of one foot a month. Since the pit closure in 1982, the level has risen to within 150 feet of the natural groundwater level.
The pit and its water present a serious environmental problem because the water, with dissolved oxygen, allows pyrite and sulfide minerals in the ore and wall rocks to decay, releasing acid. When the pit water level eventually reaches the natural water table, estimated to occur by around 2020, the pit water will reverse flow back into surrounding groundwater, polluting into Silver Bow Creek which is the headwaters of Clark Fork River. The acidic water in the pit carries a heavy load of dissolved heavy metals. In fact, the water contains so much dissolved metal (up to 187 ppm Cu) that some material is mined directly from the water.