Contact: Faye Yates
(914) 365-8878
faye@ldeo.columbia.edu
For immediate release
October 1, 1998

Zinc in Sludge From Spanish Reservoir Break Equals Mine's Annual Output, Researchers Find

River Water Almost As Acidic As Vinegar, Columbia Team Says

	Researchers from Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth 
Observatory believe that the collapse last spring of a retaining wall holding 
tailings from a Spanish zinc mine has dumped an amount of zinc into rivers 
nearly equal to the mine's total annual output.
	The accident last April 25 at the Los Frailes zinc mine in Aznalcollar, about 
50 miles south of Seville, released some 5 million cubic meters of acidic sludge 
into the Guadiamar River, which one week after the spill had an acidity 
approaching that of vinegar, the Columbia researchers say.  Sludge in the 
Guadiamar also contaminated the Guadalquivir, the river that runs through 
Seville in southwestern Spain.  The work was published in the Sept. 22 issue of 
EOS, the weekly journal of the American Geophysical Union.
	Alexander van Geen, a research scientist at Lamont, in Palisades, N.Y., 
and Zanna Chase, a Columbia graduate student, measured the amount of zinc in 
water and sediments in the rivers downstream from the Los Frailes mine early 
last May.  They concluded that the sludge released from the retaining pond may 
have contained as much as 120,000 tons of zinc, comparable to the mine's annual 
output of 125,000 tons, as well as high quantities of sulfates, contributing to the 
sludge's acidity.
	At high concentrations, zinc, like many heavy metals, can be harmful to 
the environment, Ms. Chase said.  Plants and nitrogen-fixing bacteria 
areparticularly sensitive to zinc pollution, causing concern about possible crop 
losses.  Algae also is affected negatively by excess zinc, she said, posing a possible 
threat to fish populations that depend on algae as a food source.
	In wildlife studies since the mine accident, fish caught near the mouth of 
the Rio Tinto were found to be highly contaminated with zinc, Dr. van Geen 
reported.  While emergency dikes successfully diverted the contaminated sludge 
away from Doöana National Park, a nearby wildlife reserve, vegetation and 
wildlife in other areas were exposed to the pollution, he said.
	Dr. van Geen plans to compare the nearby Tinto-Odiel watershed, a 
historically polluted area, to the two rivers contaminated by the mine spill.  The 
Tinto and Odiel rivers are located in a Spanish region known as the Iberian pyrite 
belt, which has been heavily mined for thousands of years, Dr. van Geen said.  
The Rio Tinto is chronically acidic and contaminated with both zinc and iron; its 
name means "tinted river."  Data from past Tinto-Odiel contamination may help 
determine what effects the mine accident will have on the Guadiamar and 
Guadalquivir rivers, the Lamont researchers suggested.
	Mined ore is ground and the useful zinc is separated from rock by floating 
the pulverized ore in a reservoir.  Once the metal is removed from the pool's 
surface, what is left is a reservoir filled with highly acidic water and mining 
residue, often containing toxic minerals that failed to separate in the process.
	The researchers took measurements at distances of up to 40 kilometers, or 
about 25 miles, from the mine.  Ten kilometers, or about 6 miles, from the mine, 
the amount of zinc found in river sediments was 100 times the amount found in 
uncontaminated river banks, the Columbia researchers said.  Zinc 
concentrations downstream were less than they expected, however, leading to the 
conclusion that carbonates in local rock may have buffered the water, reducing its 
acidity and causing some zinc to be precipitated from the tailings.
	Dr. van Geen will return to Spain in December to conduct more tests on 
water quality in the rivers affected by the mine spill.

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