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Oil Sands Environmental Management Bibliography

The Cumulative Environmental Management Association (CEMA)partnered with the Oil Sands Research and Information Network (OSRIN) to create the new Oil Sands Environmental Management Bibliography, which includes documents relevant to the environmental management of oil sands development in Alberta. The majority of the documents focus on the mineable oil sands in the Athabasca deposit, though some documents relate to in-situ developments. This bibliography was last updated in November 2014.

Consolidation testing of oil sand fine tailings

Year of Publication: 2011

Abstract:
The paper presents the results of several tests performed on a sample of Mature Fine Tailings (MFT) in which the consolidation is induced by seepage forces in the laboratory and by increased gravity level in a geotechnical centrifuge. These tests are particularly suitable for testing soft slurries. The test with seepage forces, the Seepage Induced Consolidation Test (SICT), is used to obtain compressibility and permeability characteristics of the tailings material while the centrifuge modeling test is used to independently verify the obtained properties. The analyses for both tests recognize that the void ratio (solids content) within each sample is variable and no restrictive assumptions are made on the variability of the consolidation properties of the sample. The presented results confirm that the SICT is applicable to the testing of oil sand MFT, and produce repeatable datasets that are useful in building an understanding of the behaviour of these high void ratio materials. While these findings are encouraging, some peculiarities observed in the experiments suggest that more detailed studies will be required before the results could be applied to field conditions with confidence.

Construction of Saline Creek tunnel in Athabasca oil sand

Year of Publication: 1979

Abstract:
Undisturbed oil sand is very dense and has a relatively high in sit:( shear strength. However, there is gas present within the oil sand, which causes it to swell once confining pressures are removed, and this results in a significant reduction in the strength of the material. Consequently, this swelling behaviour is a major concern in the design of tunnels in oil sand. Saline Creek Tunnel, located immediately south of the town of Fort McMurray, Alberta, is the first permanent tunnel constructed in the Athabasca Oil Sand. The finished diameter of the tunnel is 4.4 m and the tunnel is about 107 m long of which approximately 73 m is entirely within medium to rich oil sand. The maximum depth of overburden above the tunnel crown is 27.5 m. This paper documents the geotechnical investigation and design of the tunnel. The method of construction and the temporary and permanent tunnel support systems are described. Detailed observations on the behaviour of the oil sand around the tunnel opening during construction are also presented.

Contaminant fate modelling for the Athabasca River: Implementation of new sediment flux routines

Authors
Year of Publication: 1997

Abstract:
A numerical model of the one-dimensional transport and fate of organic contaminants in the Athabasca River has been developed for the Northern River Basins Study (NRBS) using the WASP4 modelling system (Golder Associates Ltd. 1995). The model simulates contaminant concentrations in the water column and bed sediments and includes a dynamic exchange between the water and bed sediment compartments. This report documents the incorporation of the sediment transport algorithms into WASP4 and the re-simulation of contaminant transport in the Athabasca River using the enhanced WASP4 model.

Contaminants in environmental samples: Mercury in the Peace Athabasca and Slave River basins

Year of Publication: 1996

Abstract:
This report summarizes and describes environmental levels of mercury in water, sediment, invertebrates, and fish from the Athabasca, Peace, and Slave river basins. Data were obtained from existing provincial and federal databases, the Northern Rivers Basins Study, and from government and private sector reports and publications. Mercury has been measured in several hundred water samples from the Basins. Mercury was detected in only a few of these samples. However, appropriate field and laboratory protocols to sample mercury in water were not used in the past; thus most detections of this element in water may not be reliable. It is noteworthy however, that because of high detection limits (0.05 to 0.1 pg/kg) mercury was not detected in most municipal effluents, and only occasionally in industrial effluents. Mercury is ubiquitous to all soils and sediments of the earth, and it is not surprising that it was found in sediment samples from the Basins at levels that range from 27 to 123 pg/kg (dry weight). Levels of mercury found in sediments were well below the current draft interim sediment guideline for mercury that was developed to protect aquatic life. The guideline is 170 pg/kg mercury (dry weight). There was no obvious increase in mercury in sediments downstream of industrial effluents compared with sediment at upstream sites. Sediment cores from Lake Athabasca indicate that mercury levels have not increased over at the past 50 years or more, and they also suggest that the Athabasca River basin is the principal source of mercury to Lake Athabasca. Mercury was not detected (< 20 pg/kg) in nine invertebrate samples collected from the Athabasca River in the Hinton to Whitecourt reach (km 1244 to 1067). However, in 1983 in the reach from km 270 to 258 that spans the Suncor operation, mercury increased in aquatic invertebrates in the downstream direction, from 70 to 1400 pg/kg. This significant increase, and the unusually high level in aquatic invertebrates, suggests that the Suncor operation in the early 1980s was a significant source of mercury to the lower Athabasca River. However, mercury levels in a single sample of invertebrates from 1994 for this same reach suggests that the Suncor operation is no longer a major source of mercury. Mercury was detected in all fish of every species taken from all lakes and rivers. In general, mercury levels in the Basins were highest in predatory fish species such as pike, walleye, burbot, and bull trout and the maximum levels were found in large specimens of these species. For the Athabasca River basin, the decreasing order for concentration of mercury in fish was walleye > goldeye > northern pike > longnose sucker > mountain whitefish. Because of high levels of mercury, consumption guidelines have been established for walleye and pike from two lakes in the Athabasca River basin, and for walleye caught from the Athabasca River. Consumption guidelines are reported by Alberta Environmental Protection in their "Annual Guide To Sport Fishing". In the reach of the Athabasca River from the town of Athabasca(km700)to the southern boundary of Wood Buffalo National Park(km 127),25%of all walleye had mercury concentrations that exceeded the Health Canada limit of 500 pg/kg. Detailed studies are required to determine the relative contribution ofnatural and industrial sources to the mercury It is recommended that: 1. Mercury concentration in walleye from Lake Athabasca and at sites along the lower Athabasca River downstream from the town of Athabasca be measured at regular intervals, perhaps every two years. 2. A detailed study be conducted in the lower Athabasca River to evaluate and to identify mechanisms and pathways o f mercury uptake by aquatic biota. The tarsands, an organic rich substrate, forms a significant part of the banks of the Athabasca River and its tributaries in this reach. Tarsands may enhance mercury uptake into the food web. An evaluation of the contribution ofthe waste-water effluent from town ofFort McMurry and the contribution of the Suncor operation to mercury loading in the lower Athabasca River should be part of this study

Contaminants in environmental samples: PCDDs and PCDFs downstream of bleached kraft mills, Peace and Athabasca Rivers, 1992

Year of Publication: 1995

Abstract:
This report provides an interpretation of analytical results for dioxins and furans in water, biofilm, sediment, invertebrates, and fish samples collected on the Athabasca and Peace Rivers in 1992. The analysis focused on the partitioning, fate, and bioaccumulation of the two compounds having the greatest potential to accumulate in animal tissue, namely 2,3,7,8-tetrachloro dibenzo-p-dioxin and 2,3,7,8-tetrachloro dibenzofuran, in order to assist in the assessment of ecosystem health and long-term effects. The report compares the levels of these compounds found upstream and downstream from pulp and paper mills, and compares the detected levels to the limits recommended under the Canadian Environmental Quality Guidelines (for sediment and water) and Health Canada guidelines (for fish tissue).

Contribution of industrial, municipal, agricultural and groundwater sources to nutrient export in the Athabasca and Wapiti and Smoky Rivers, 1980 to 1993

Year of Publication: 1996

Abstract:
The aim of this report was to: (1) assess nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) loading to the Athabasca and Wapiti-Smoky rivers, and (2) evaluate the need to consider groundwater contributions when undertaking simulation modelling of chemical parameters in the Athabasca River during winter.

Contributions to trace element analysis of human scalp hair

Authors Moon, J. C.
Year of Publication: 1988

Abstract:
Levels of 19 elements in scalp hair samples taken from 122 children and 27 adults in three northern Alberta Indian villages were compared in an effort to trace contamination from the world's first tar sands oil extraction plants into the human population. One of the three communities (Fort McKay) is in close proximity to the plants; one is also in the tar sands ecosystem, but distant from the plants (Fort Chipewyan); the third is not in the tar sands ecosystem (Garden River). Children from Fort McKay (the exposed village) had highest average hair lead, cadmium and nickel levels. Unexpected results were found in the control village most distant from the tar sands plants (Garden River) where the children had significantly elevated levels of 8 metals. Water and air particulates were collected and analyzed for the 19 elements which were included in data analysis. Most of the results of the hair analysis can be explained by results from the environmental samples, but no immediate answer can be provided for large differences found between children and adults in Garden River. Detailed data analysis has revealed several sets of highly inter-correlated metals ('correlation clusters': Pb/Cd; Al/V/Fe; Ca/Mg/Sr/Ba), which may have important applications in metal toxicity and in assessing trace element status. Effects of age, sex, and sample washing procedure are discussed.

Control of black flies in the Athabasca River: Technical document

Year of Publication: 1980

Abstract:
The program was designed from feasibility studies to develop and evaluate chemical control of S. arcticum in the Athabasca River. This appeared to be the most immediately achievable and economically practical approach to prevention of severe pest outbreaks and to reduction of farm losses in livestock production. Primary emphasis in these studies has been placed on S. arcticum as the pest incriminated in severe outbreaks of biting flies affecting livestock enterprises in Athabasca County and Improvement District No. 18. The program has been designed to embrace the more extensive problems of biting flies in agriculture, and concomitantly to provide information necessary for management of problems of black flies that occur during the development of resource and recreational industries in northern Alberta. This document contains 21 technical reports supporting the program studies.

Control of small mammal damage in the Alberta oil sands reclamation and afforestation program

Authors Radvanyi, A.
Year of Publication: 1980

Abstract:
Open-pit mining procedures being conducted in the oil sands of northeast Alberta greatly disrupt many acres of the environment. The reclamation and afforestation program intended to restore the forest habitat encountered an unanticipated problem when a large percentage of young nursery-raised trees planted on a tailings pond dyke and on overburden dump sites were found to have been girdled by a population of meadow voles which had become established in the dense grass habitat created to stabilize steep sandy slopes of the spoil piles. The study monitored small mammal populations through a high, low, and a second high level commensurate with the 3- to 4-year population cycle of small mammals. A control technique utilizing grain treated with an anticoagulant rodenticide made available to the mice in poisoned bait feeder stations effectively reduced small mammal numbers to very low levels and reduced girdling damage from an average of 50% to 1-2%.

Control of small mammals on reclamation areas in the AOSERP study area

Authors
Year of Publication: 1978

Abstract:
This proposal was prepared in response to Alberta Oil Sands Environmental Research Program proposed Project No LS 7.1.1, which concerns small mammal research on their revegetation study areas. AOSERP is concerned about the potential disruption by rodents of reclamation efforts on the leases of Syncrude and GCOS. Such disruption by rodents has been documented for other reforestation projects (Radvanyi, 1966, 1970, and 1971). AOSERP intends to evaluate this potential disruption in their study area and devise environmentally safe and efficient methods for reducing it. Based on our understanding of this problem, we feel that two methods of reducing rodent caused disruption of reclamation should be considered. Both involve introducing reclamation efforts in an environment with low numbers of rodents. The methods are: 1. Planting trees and shrubs when rodent numbers are at the low or declining phase of their cycle. This is a non-manipulative approach, but will fullfil the objective of planting seedlings with a minimum of risk of \"predation\" from rodents. 2. Manipulating rodent numbers by manipulating vegetative cover. To implement these methods several sets of data are required. Population \"cycles\" must be described so that lows can be predicted and the effect of vegetative cover on rodent numbers must be known before any manipulations are undertaken. The purpose of the proposed study is to provide data required for predicting population lows and determining the effects of vegetative cover on rodent numbers. We are prepared to participate closely with AOSERP to refine our study plan according to their specific needs. The effective planning of control procedures and the implementation of experimental studies on long-term biological control methods should wait, and be based upon information gathered from the present study.

Control of vegetation damage by small rodents on reclaimed land

Authors Green, J. E.
Year of Publication: 1982

Abstract:
Because stabilization of the tailings sand berms is necessary to reduce erosion by wind and water, the use of ground covers cannot be totally eliminated. Some form of ground cover and/or soil stabilizer is necessary. Widespread use of an artificial soil stabilizer, such as hydromulch, is not feasible because of the large size of the reclamation areas. The solution appears to be the development of a seed mix which will result in a ground cover community with several characteristics: 1. a well-developed root system to help stabilize the tailings sand; 2. a poor capability to compete with trees and shrubs for water and nutrients; 3. a minimal development of above-ground plant cover to reduce the attractiveness to M. pennsylvanicus; and 4. a reproductive capability sufficient to maintain a self- sustaining vegetation community. Several species of grasses, which may meet these criteria, are currently being tested on the Reduced Cover and Combined Treatment study areas. Tree and shrub survival might also be enhanced through timing of the reclamation program. For example, trees and shrubs might first be planted on reclamation sites and allowed to establish prior to the application of a sparse ground cover mix. In addition, because M. pennsylvanicus populations appear to reach high numbers only once every three to four years and because damage can be expected to increase to critical levels during these peak, years, trees and shrubs should be planted immediately following the population decline. The trees and shrubs consequently would have two to three complete growing seasons before the next population peak of M. pennsylvanicus and likely would be better able to withstand the stress of girdling damage.

Controls on the spatial distribution of soil moisture and solute transport in a sloping reclamation cover

Year of Publication: 2008

Abstract:
A detailed field study was conducted to map the spatial distribution of soil moisture and salt transport within a sloping clay-rich reclamation cover overlying a saline-sodic shale overburden landform. The soil moisture data suggest that: lower-slope positions are wetter in spring due to the down-slope movement of surface run-off; infiltration occurs via preferential flow paths while the ground is frozen; and, interflow occurs along the cover–shale surface when the ground thaws. Soil moisture conditions also remain wetter in lower-slope positions throughout the summer and fall. Salt transport from the shale into the overlying cover is affected predominantly by soil moisture conditions and lateral groundwater flux. Quasi one-dimensional modelling of in situ profiles of pore-water Na+ concentration demonstrate that: (i) increased soil moisture conditions in lower-slope positions accelerate salt transport into the cover through diffusion; (ii) snow melt infiltration water bypasses the soil matrix higher in the cover profile; (iii) drier conditions in the mid- and upper-slope positions limit salt transport through diffusion; (iv) advection accelerates upward salt transport in lower-slope positions; and, (v) interflow and (or) deep percolation are key mechanisms mitigating vertical salt movement in lower- and upper-slope positions.

Cooperative information systems: A tool for supporting Alberta's Land-Use Framework

Authors Banister, K. R.
Year of Publication: 2009

Abstract:
Access to land has become a limiting factor for developments in Alberta. This has led the Government of Alberta to introduce the Land-use Framework (Alberta Sustainable Resource Development, 2008) as a way to improve land-use decision making. Cumulative effects management and the establishment of information and knowledge systems are key components of the framework. With the use of cooperative information systems to combine ecological databases, individual environmental site assessments can be used to build local and regional environmental assessments. This allows for the identification of broader issues that can be missed in individual assessments. As well, local and regional environmental assessments can be developed and reviewed in a timely and effective manner, and government, resource industries, and other stakeholders can be provided with more comprehensive information for decision- making.

Correlations between oil sands minerals and processing characteristics

Year of Publication: 1988

Abstract:
The geology and subsequent mineral composition of oil sands deposits have important consequences for their processing behaviour. Differences in oil sands processability and extraction yields can be dependent upon many factors including the composition of the mineral components and the organic complexes that are associated with certain minerals. These mineral-organic associations help provide the bridge which leads to carry over of bitumen with the tailings as well as carry over of water and mineral matter with the product. Characterization of the minerals via various laboratory techniques and the relationship of these measurements to processing behaviour is discussed. Portions of this work were presented at the 1988 annual meetings of The Canadian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy and the Chemical Institute of Canada.

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