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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.

Literature review - Land classification systems for disturbed lands

Authors Piorecky, M.
Year of Publication: 2011

Abstract:
This report describes a literature review undertaken to determine a comprehensive approach for the ecological classification of disturbed ecosystems that would be applicable to the mineable oil sands region of northeastern Alberta.

Literature review for wetland establishment on reclaimed oil sands leases

Authors Cobbaert, D.
Year of Publication: 2003

Abstract:
The objective of this project was to conduct a literature review of methods and techniques that have been applied in reclamation of wetlands and aquatic areas in the last 20 years, with emphasis on the last five years.

Literature review of reclamation techniques for wildlife habitats in the boreal forest

Authors
Year of Publication: 2003

Abstract:
The purpose of this project was to obtain reclamation techniques that would restore functional wildlife habitat at the landscape level following industrial disturbances. However, reclamation techniques that will restore habitat features needed for functional wildlife habitat at landscape levels have not been developed. The research reviewed can only be applied at the stand and element level. In addition, the current body of reclamation research is still focused on how to refine the traditional reclamation techniques, including placements of coarse woody debris in cleared areas, soil reconstruction, and planting of shrubs.

Literature review on pollutant deposition processes

Year of Publication: 1979

Abstract:
An in-depth review of the literature related to deposition of gases and particulates by dry deposition and precipitation scavenging is reported. Recommendations are made on the hypotheses, algorithms or models considered to be most suitable for incorporation into a pollutant transport and diffusion model to be selected later. A review of field monitoring programs is also reported. A program is designed to provide data for calibrating the models recommended appropriate to the study area of the Alberta Oil Sands Environmental Research Program.

Literature review on pollution deposition processes

Year of Publication: 1979

Abstract:
An in-depth review of the literature related to deposition of gases and particulates by dry deposition and precipitation scavenging is reported. Recommendations are made on the hypotheses, algorithms or models considered to be most suitable for incorporation into a pollutant transport and diffusion model to be selected later. A review of field monitoring programs is also reported. A program is designed to provide data for calibrating the models recommended appropriate to the study area of the Alberta Oil Sands Environmental Research Program.

Litter production in Pinus banksiana dominated stands in northern Alberta

Authors Fyles, J. W.
Year of Publication: 1986

Abstract:
Tree and shrub litter production was measured over 2 years in 12 jack pine (Pinusbanksiana Lamb.) and 2 white spruce (Piceaglauca (Moench) Voss) dominated stands located in the Hondo – Slave Lake and Athabasca Oil Sands areas of north central and northeastern Alberta. Annual and daily production rates were calculated for foliage (by species), male cones, and structural material (bark, twigs). Annual litter fall weights were typical of those measured in other boreal regions and were correlated with stand basal area. Seasonal patterns in daily production rates suggested that three classes of control factors were involved in determining litter fall rates within a stand. Random factors, such as weather, and chronic factors, such as insect or disease activity, contolled foliage and structural litter through most of the year. Predictable seasonal factors relating to plant physiological state controlled autumn foliage litter fall in deciduous and most coniferous species and production of male cone litter in early summer.

Locations of Uraniferous Boulders, Outcrops and Pits along the North Shore of Lake Athabasca, NTS 74L,M (GIS data, point features)

Authors
Year of Publication: 1989

Abstract:
Locations of uraniferous boulder-fields and uraniferous swamps extracted from industry assessment reports are useful metallogenetic indicators for uranium exploration within and around the Athabasca Basin. They are used as pathfinders to uranium occurrences and prospects. These locations along the northern rim of the Athabasca Basin in Alberta have been compiled in GIS format and delivered as a point shapefile. In Alberta, the northern rim of the Athabasca Basin and the regolith underlying the Athabasca unconformity are locally exposed along the northern shore of Lake Athabasca. Extensive uranium exploration work in the 1970s, including scintillometer prospecting traverses, geological mapping, airborne and ground geophysics, and drilling, have documented several uraniferous outcrops with scintillometer readings of up to 10 000 counts per second, and uraniferous boulders and boulder trains with radioactivity up to two orders of magnitude higher than the background. Near the Alberta-Saskatchewan border, uraniferous boulders show geochemical characteristics consistent with a Saskatchewan source, whereas to the west boulders have a distinct geochemical signal suggesting a local source in Alberta.

Long term in-situ behaviour of oil sands fine tailings in Suncor's Pond 1A

Authors Wells, P. S.
Year of Publication: 2011

Abstract:
Suncor Energy Inc’s oil sands operation north of Fort McMurray, Alberta, has been in production since 1966. Pond 1A, a fluid fine tailings (FFT) storage and flow-through recycle water pond, began infilling in the 1970’s. The first sampling programme of the FFT was conducted in 1977, with periodic follow-up programmes through to 2010. This pond has been used to store volumes of FFT in the form of Mature Fine Tailings (MFT) at significant depths in relatively undisturbed conditions for over 25 years. This site, unique in the industry, is important to understanding the long-term behaviour of fluid fine tailings in the oil sands landscapes. The observed behaviour provides insights into potential storage and material strength gain projections. Several decades worth of sample profiles are provided, along with general observations on the potential implications to the industry.

Long term prediction of vegetation performance on mined sands

Authors Bliss, L. C.
Year of Publication: 1977

Abstract:
This project on the \"Long Term Prediction of Vegetation Performance On Mined Sands\" (V.E.6.1) was undertaken to provide management with answers on the predictive ability to maintain different kinds of vegetation on raw sands. The research was designed as an integrated, multi-disciplinary program that would concentrate on the role of water stress in a dynamic soil-plant-atmosphere system of a planted grass cover and a natural Jack pine forest. To date only the latter project has been initiated because of the lack of funding and approval to work on the GCOS dike in 1975. This and the Syncrude dyke represent the worst (driest) environmental situation and therefore revegetation of other sand deposits should be more easily accomplished. The Richardson Fire Tower site was chosen because of the representativeness of its Jack pine - lichen woodland on deep sands, a forest type so characteristic of northeastern Alberta. The results of the first full year show that climatically this southwest-facing sand slope warms more rapidly in spring than do level sites at Mildred Lake and Fort McMurray and that the 1976 summer was above normal for temperature. Precipitation was near normal based upon the 1941 - 1970 period. Of the >60 days of precipitation, over 60% were 4 mm or less and thus little if any water entered the soil due to tree, lichen, and litter interception. Both needle duff and lichens provide a significant barrier to surface evaporation compared with open sand. Resistance to evaporation is 2 to 3 times greater with a lichen cover than with litter. The soils are very porous which is advantageous for water entrance, thus preventing erosion but porosity is a disadvantage in maintaining higher water levels near the soil surface for plant growth. These soils recharge during snowmelt in late March - early April; little runoff occurs and over the summer soil water drawdown takes place. Soil moisture content (volume basis) is generally 8 - 15% near the surface in spring, but by late September is 1 - 3% at all depths. Xylem water potentials, a measure of tree water content, were never very low (mean maximum at dawn -5 to -7 atm. and mean minimum at midday -11 to -14 atm.) which reflect a year of average precipitation with frequent light rains and periodic heavier storms. Transpiration and stomatal closure were controlled largely by vapour pressure deficits. Jack pine avoided spring drought by remaining dormant when air and needle temperatures were above freezing, yet when soils were still frozen. Although Jack pine did not show indications of severe drought in a relatively moist summer, it did develop xylem water potentials of -16 to -18 atm., values which are probably detrimental to many of the species being used in revegetation trials on the dike (Bromus inermis, Phleum pratense, and species of Agropyron). This means that potential species must be drought hardy and tested under laboratory rather than only under field conditions to determine their survival under severe drought conditions that may occur but once in 30 to 50 years. The studies of mycorrhizae show that a large number of species of fungi infect the roots of Jack pine and that the infecting flora from disturbed soils (old burns) is quite different from that of undisturbed forests. Since mycorrhizae are critical for the proper growth and survival of pines, care in innoculating tree seedlings with the proper species is essential. The energy and water balance mathematical model predicts the heat and water status of the Jack pine forest. Examination of the model outputs suggests that late season resistance to water uptake occurs because of increased root resistance in autumn. If this is confirmed with further experimental data, and model runs, it means that fall droughts may be especially critical because of the reduced ability of the trees to absorb water through their roots. A second field season coupled with the laboratory studies to determine lethal and sublethal levels of water stress in Jack pine will provide the added inputs to the models necessary for predicting tree response to severe climatic stress. These data, gathered in a highly integrated manner, will permit the calculation of tree survival on sands, be they dikes or other kinds of mined sand, in terms of soil water content and tree density (including crown extent) in relation to the exceptional dry year that may occur once in 30 to 50 years. Data from field trials of grasses or woody species, without supporting measurements of plant physiological responses to environmental conditions cannot provide this essential predictive tool for management unless the one in 30 to 50 year drought cycle is encountered. It is for this reason that modelling of the data in order to predict plant response to unusual environmental conditions becomes so useful. In summary, this study should be able to provide sufficient data to determine whether or not an open stand of Jack pine or similar conifer is the desired end point in maintaining vegetation at a low maintenance cost on sands, the result of open pit mining of the oil sands.

Long-term effects of organic amendments on the recovery of plant and soil microbial communities following disturbance in the Canadian boreal forest

Year of Publication: 2013

Abstract:
Background and Aims Ecosystem recovery following disturbance requires the reestablishment of key soil biogeochemical processes. This long-term 7 year study describes effects of organic material, moisture, and vegetation on soil microbial community development in the Athabasca Oil Sands Region of Western Canada. Methods Phospholipid fatty acid analysis was used to characterize and compare soil microbial community composition and development on reclaimed and natural forest sites. Additionally, we conducted a laboratory moisture manipulation experiment. Results The use of forest floor material as an organic amendment resulted in a greater percent cover of upland vegetation and placed the soil microbial community on a faster trajectory towards ecosystem recovery than did the use of a peat amendment. The soil micro- bial composition within the reclaimed sites exhibited a greater response to changes in moisture than did the soil microbial communities from natural sites. Conclusion Our research shows that the use of native organic amendment (forest floor) on reclaimed sites, and the associated establishment of native vegetation promote the development of soil microbial communities more similar to those found on natural forest sites. Additionally, soil microbial communities from natural sites may be more resistant to changes in soil moisture than those found on reclaimed sites.

Long-term monitoring and modelling of a reclaimed watershed cover on oil sands tailings

Year of Publication: 2013

Abstract:
Tailings sand associated with oil sands mining contains saline process-affected pore-water which can have a detrimental impact on the performance of reclamation covers. A reclamation cover site, located at the Syncrude Canada Ltd.’s South West Sand Storage facility (SWSS), consisted of 45 cm of cover soil over tailings sand. The site was instrumented in 2001 to measure real-time local meteorology, soil temperature, water content and suction over an eight-year period. A one-dimensional numerical model (VADOSE/W) was created to calculate moisture fluxes through the cover/tailings interface over a long-term period (51 years). A pore-water volume method was then used to evaluate the potential risk of salt transport into the overlying cover soil. The long-term modelling demonstrated that the cumulative water flux across the cover/tailings interface is downward, towards the water table, when the water table is deeper than 3 m below the cover/tailings interface; although the water flux across this interface in any single year may be upward. The risk of cover salinisation due to the upward movement of saline tailings pore-water from the underlying water table under these conditions was low (less than one occurrence in over 50 years).

Long-term performance of a reclamation cover: The evolution of hydraulic properties and hydrologic response

Year of Publication: 2006

Abstract:
The performance of a prototype reclamation cover constructed over saline-sodic shale overburden was tracked over a six-year period. The test cover, constructed on a 5H:1V slope, was comprised of a thin layer (approximately 20 cm) of a peat-mineral soil mixture overlying a thicker layer (approximately 80 cm) of `secondary' (glacial lacustrine or till). The primary objective of the cover design was to provide sufficient moisture storage for vegetation while mitigating the upward diffusion of salts from the underlying pyritic shale. In situ measurements of saturated hydraulic conductivity were conducted using a Guelph permeameter. Hydrologic measurements included soil moisture, matric suction, soil temperature, surface runoff, and interflow. The major ion chemistry of both surface runoff and interflow waters were measured. In situ measurements of hydraulic conductivity over the six-year period demonstrated that the cover developed secondary structure within four years of placement, likely due to repeated freeze/thaw and wet/dry cycles. The hydrologic response data and interflow chemistry suggests that the mechanisms responsible for the rapid delivery of precipitation to the base of the cover during spring melt are controlled by interactions between soil conditions and climate. Preferential flow occurs when a threshold wetting is achieved and when the ground is either frozen or the matric suctions are low. It also appears that the relative contribution of `event' and `pre-event' water evolves as interflow proceeds. Lateral interflow appears to be an important mechanism for mitigating the upward diffusion of salts into the cover.

Long-term plant community development on topsoil treatments overlying a phytotoxic growth medium

Year of Publication: 2000

Abstract:
The application of topsoil over phytotoxic mine waste materials is often the most effective method for establishing plant communities and protecting these communities from the inimical properties of such waste materials. However, long-term data on the effectiveness of this type of remediation, as well as on cultural treatments used to enhance vegetation establishment on topsoil cover treatments, are lacking. Therefore, we evaluated long-term plant community development on study plots where 60 cm of Paraho retorted oil shale was covered by various depths of topsoil. The study plots were drill seeded with native, introduced, or a combination of native and introduced species, and fertilized with one of three rates of nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) fertilizer following construction of the plots in 1977. Data collected 20 yr after seeding showed that total aboveground biomass was greatest on deeper topsoil depths and on plots seeded with introduced plant species. However, when considering the interaction between these two variables, we found that native species were as productive as introduced species on deeper topsoil depths and on the control. Relative plant species composition and plant species richness were greatly influenced by seed mixture treatments. Plots seeded with a particular seed mixture in 1977 were still highly dominated by those species originally seeded, and native seed mixture plots were more species rich than introduced seed mixture plots. Chemical analysis of the soil covers and underlying retorted shale suggests that leaching processes have moderated the once adverse chemical characteristics of the retorted shale.

Long-term trends in ecosystem health: Quantitative analysis of river benthic invertebrate communities Peace and Athabasca Rivers

Year of Publication: 1995

Abstract:
This project assessed the long-term trends in ecosystem health of the Peace and Athabasca rivers by evaluating changes in the composition of invertebrate communities in relation to effluent loading. Existing long-term data sets for benthic invertebrates were compiled and their sampling procedures reviewed for deficiencies. Where the sampling procedures were sufficiently similar, quantitative statistical analyses (e.g., time series analyses) was performed on the data to determine whether patterns in benthic community structure were consistent with those predicted impacts from point-source inputs.

Longitudinal study of personal adjustment and social conditions in the Fort McMurray area Vol I: Research design

Authors
Year of Publication: 1978

Abstract:
The purpose of Phase 1 was to establish a research design for a longitudinal study to identify and explain the relationships between social and personal adjustment of people in the oil sands region. The research design was to be implemented in Fort McMurray and to be applicable to any resource community. The Study Team examined the literature and studies reievant to resource communities and conventional communities, and consulted with the Client and interested departments. The purposes of this review were to determine the central dimensions of personal, family, social, economic and community life to be identified and monitored during the Longitudinal Study; the data and information required; the most appropriate theoretical and methodological approaches to take; and the instruments to monitor and measure change. The Study Team's emphasis was upon user requirements; theoretical and conceptual soundness; and feasibility within the time and resources available. This work was integrated with a comparable study being prepared by the Team for the Cold Lake Region. This Report sets out the Team's findings. It recommends theoretical and methodological approaches and specifies the instruments and procedures to be used. The major recommendations include the establishement of an Institutional Information System to collect objective data; a study of the local economy; a study of children in school; and a statistically reliable household survey using instruments to measure psychological, attitudinal and activity characteristics of the population. These are to be applied again in Phase 3 and changes to be noted, measured and assessed. The Report sets out the costs of each component of the research design, and describes various options, including their respective advantages and disadvantages. If it is not possible to carry out all components of the proposed Longitudinal Study, the information provided will assist the Client in establishing priorities for the selection of the components to be used.

Longitudinal study of personal adjustment and social conditions in the Fort McMurray area Vol II.a: Background papers

Authors
Year of Publication: 1978

Abstract:
The need for a baseline information system derives from the diversity and inconsistencies in the existing data sources in the province, in the data itself, in the collecting procedures and regarding accessibility. In addition, we were required to investigate the feasibility of establishing a set of ''social indicators'' for the Fort McMurray study area. In this background Paper we set out the results of our examination, and our conclusions. We propose a framework within which to collect and order base data. And we suggest the socio-economic data which might comprise the data system.

Longitudinal study of personal adjustment and social conditions in the Fort McMurray area Vol II.b: Time-use diaries

Authors
Year of Publication: 1978

Abstract:
The time-use diary is a data collection instrument intended to furnish a detailed account of daily individual activities by type, sequence, duration and location. Its purpose is to provide a comprehensive picture of how people spend their time. Experience has shown that the time-use diary is a valid instrument for data collection and analysis. Related research in Europe (Szalai, 1965), Britain (BBC,l965) and the U.S. (Robinson and Converse, 1966; Chapin and Hightower, 1966) has shed considerable light on how people spend their leisure and work time on a daily basis. Moreover, it has been used to supplement and enrich information obtained through interviews and surveys.

Lower Athabasca region air quality management framework for nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and sulphur dioxide (SO2)

Authors
Year of Publication: 2012

Abstract:
Alberta Environment and Sustainable Resource Development’s three Lower Athabasca Region management frameworks were developed using input from different stakeholders within the Lower Athabasca Region including industry, First Nations and Métis peoples, and non-governmental organizations. The Air Quality Management Framework provides an additional component for the region in the overall air quality management system. This includes setting ambient air quality triggers and limits for nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and sulphur dioxide (SO2) with guidance for long-term decision making and management.

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