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Controls on water quality below a reclaimed surface coal mine, southeastern Montana

May 14, 2025

Coal mining and reclamation can have a profound influence on hydrogeologic systems, with clear consequences for groundwater quality, yet their long-term influence on downgradient water quality over time following reclamation is less well documented. Geochemical trends were evaluated in water quality downgradient of a fully reclaimed landscape at the former Big Sky Mine in the Rosebud Creek watershed (southeastern Montana, USA), over a 3-year period (2020–2022), including bond release in 2022. Within 6 km downgradient from the reclaimed area, sulfate concentrations decreased from approximately 3500 to 1800 mg l−1 within the Miller Coulee alluvial aquifer. Major ions, δ34SSO4 values, and residence time tracers suggest that the observed decreases in sulfate concentration result from a combination of dilution by mixed-age inflows and incomplete transit of the high salinity plume from the mine boundary. Both bedrock and alluvial aquifers of the Rosebud Creek corridor contained contributions of millennia-old regional groundwater, which may serve to mitigate mine-derived high salinity waters. Rosebud Creek, which traverses the outflow zone of Miller Coulee in the study area, exhibited high sulfate concentrations during low flows and consistent downgradient increases in sulfate concentration. The possibility of plume dynamics in Miller Coulee suggests that the greatest water quality impacts may not yet have reached Rosebud Creek.

Publication Year 2025
Title Controls on water quality below a reclaimed surface coal mine, southeastern Montana
DOI 10.1007/s10040-025-02898-z
Authors Skye Keeshin, Stephanie A. Ewing, Elizabeth B Meredith, Robert Payne, W. Gardner, Andrew Hunt
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Hydrogeology Journal
Index ID 70269288
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Geology, Geophysics, and Geochemistry Science Center
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