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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.

Reclamation with native grasses in Alberta: Field trial results

Authors
Year of Publication: 1986

Abstract:
Between 1978 and 1981 the Alberta Forest Service established 10 native grass field trials. The general objectives were: (1) to select the most promising native grass species for reclamation of high elevation disturbances in the Eastern Slopes; (2) to design and evaluate native grass seed mixtures; and (3) to develop recommendations for establishing and maintaining native grasses on high elevation disturbances. This report gives the first long-term results from these trials. Species performances were generally poor in the species adaptability trials at Cadomin. The wheatgrasses, especially Agropyron dasystachyum, A. trachycaulum and A. trachycaulum 'Revenue ' performed best overall. Phleum alpinum, Poa interior and Trisetum spicatum were considered failures. Contrastingly, most species performed reasonably well in the species adaptability trial at Mildred Lake. On both trial sites the cultivated species performed equally as well as their native counterparts. The performance of the native grass mixture was poor in the nurse crop x fertilizer rate x seeding rate trials at Cadomin. Fertilization produced a significant increase in plant cover. Neither the nurse crop nor the seeding rate treatments had any significant effect on the performance of the seed mixture. Seed mixtures containing wheatgrass species, especially dasystachyum, performed best in the four seed mixture trials. In contrast, the only seed mixture lacking a wheatgrass generally had the poorest results. The cultivated companion crops had little or no effect on the plant cover of the native grass mixtures. The best native grass mixtures performed equally as well as the best cultivated grass-legume mixtures. In the establishment methods trial at Cadomin the most successful treatments were those that covered and protected the seed. Drill seeding and broadcast seeding followed by application of a mulch produced the highest plant covers. The hydroseeding treatments, in which the seed and mulch were applied together, gave the lowest plant covers. The results from this trial suggested that native grasses, if established properly, can produce adequate cover for erosion control purposes. The revegetation treatments were generally more successful on the native mineral soil than the coarser textured overburden. Most species produced higher plant cover on the mineral soil. Furthermore, the mineral soil supported substantially higher species richness (number of species), indicating the plant communities were more diverse on mineral soil than overburden.

Recommendations for developing a growth and yield strategic plan for the mineable oil sands: Technical document

Authors Gulyas, G.
Year of Publication: 2010

Abstract:
The purpose of this project was to develop recommendations to consider for inclusion in an integrated growth and yield program on reclaimed lands in the mineable oil sands area. The recommendations were based on the consultant's interpretation of those growth and yield program components needed for CEMA members to meet their goals and objectives.

Recovering environmental microorganisms for ex-situ oil sands process water remediation

Year of Publication: 2014

Abstract:
Alberta oil sands process water (OSPW) contains several contaminants of environmental concern, particularly toxic naphthenic acids (NAs). Currently there is no suitable treatment for OSPW therefore it is collected and stored in tailings ponds. OSPW toxicity can be mitigated by aerobic microbial degradation of the NAs by indigenous microorganisms in-situ, however this is a long and slow process. Ex-situ bioremediation of OSPW presents a much more efficient method to detoxify OSPW. The microorganisms chosen, and their method of growth have consequences on the success of a bioremediation effort. Here we evaluate biofilm-mediated bioremediation of model NAs, specifically comparing multi species to single species biofilms. The Calgary Biofilm Device (CBD) was used to grow biofilms from an OSPW inoculum. Gas chromatography reveals that multi species biofilms are capable of degrading a broader spectrum of NAs than are single species biofilms, which may be indicative of a communal/synergistic metabolic effort.

Recovery of bitumen from oil sands tailings streams and deposits: Potential opportunities and benefits

Year of Publication: 2014

Abstract:
For oil sands mines, about 10% of bitumen contained in the oil sand processed in extraction remains in tailings streams and deposits. Alberta Innovates, Energy and Environment Solutions (AI-EES) and the Tailings Environmental Priority Area of the Canadian Oil Sands Innovation Alliance (COSIA) are interested in determining if, and the extent to which, bitumen in tailings impacts tailings management processes, deposits or other environmental properties of tailings deposits.

Recovery of vanadium from Athabasca tar sands fly ash

Year of Publication: 1979

Abstract:
Describes a new process that leaches most of the vanadium present in Great Canadian Oil Sands petroleum coke fly ash, and analyzes ash morphology and chemistry.

Recreating a functioning forest soil in reclaimed oil sands in northern Alberta

Authors Rowland, S. M.
Year of Publication: 2008

Abstract:
During oil-sands mining all vegetation cover, soil, overburden and oil-sand is removed, leaving pits several kilometres wide and hundreds of metres deep. These pits are reclaimed by a variety of treatments using mineral soil or a mixed peat and mineral soil as the capping layer and planted with trees with natural colonisation from adjacent sites. A number of reclamation treatments covering different age classes were compared with a range of natural forest ecotypes to identify the age at which the treatments become similar to a natural site with respect to vegetation composition and key soil attributes relevant to nutrient cycling. Ecosystem function was estimated from plant community composition, litter decomposition, development of an organic layer and bio-available nutrients. Key response variables including moisture, pH, C:N ratios, bio-available nutrients and ground-cover were analysed by non-metric multidimensional scaling and cluster analysis to discover which reclamation treatments were moving towards or merging with natural forest ecotypes and at what age this occurs. On reclaimed sites, bio-available nutrients including nitrate generally were above the natural range of variability but ammonium, phosphorus, potassium, sodium and manganese were generally very low and limiting to ecosystem development. Plant diversity was similar to natural sites from 5 years to 30 years after reclamation, but declined as reclaimed sites approached canopy closure. Grass and forb leaf litters decomposed faster than aspen or pine in the first year, but decomposition on one reclamation treatment fell below the natural range of variability. Development of an organic layer appeared to be facilitated by the presence of shrubs, while forbs correlated negatively with first-year decomposition of aspen litter.

Recreating a functioning forest soil in reclaimed oil sands in northern Alberta: An approach for measuring success in ecological restoration

Year of Publication: 2009

Abstract:
During oil-sands mining all vegetation, soil, overburden, and oil sand is removed, leaving pits several kilometers wide and up to 100 m deep. These pits are reclaimed through a variety of treatments using subsoil or a mixed peat-mineral soil cap. Using nonmetric multidimensional scaling and cluster analysis of measurements of ecosystem function, reclamation treatments of several age classes were compared with a range of natural forest ecotypes to discover which treatments had created ecosystems similar to natural forest ecotypes and at what age this occurred. Ecosystem function was estimated from bioavailable nutrients, plant community composition, litter decomposition rate, and development of a surface organic layer. On the reclamation treatments, availability of nitrate, calcium, magnesium, and sulfur were generally higher than in the natural forest ecotypes, while ammonium, P, K, and Mn were generally lower. Reclamation treatments tended to have more bare ground, grasses, and forbs but less moss, lichen, shrubs, trees, or woody debris than natural forests. Rates of litter decomposition were lower on all reclamation treatments. Development of an organic layer appeared to be facilitated by the presence of shrubs. With repeated applications of fertilizers, measured variables for the peat-mineral amendments fell within the range of natural variability at about 20 yr. An intermediate subsoil layer reduced the need for fertilizer and conditions resembling natural forests were reached about 15 yr after a single fertilizer application. Treatments over tailings sand receiving only one application of fertilizer appeared to be on a different trajectory to a novel ecosystem.

Refining the application of kriging in the CEMA riparian review

Year of Publication: 2011

Abstract:
A report describing modifications to the kirging and the revised Riparian Classification and Reclamation Guide. The kirging methods were updated in the Riparian Guide and its appendices.

Regional application of MAGIC to lake catchments and soils in the Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo

Year of Publication: 2010

Abstract:
This report documents the regional application of MAGIC in the Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo conducted in 2010. The application was completed in two phases, one for lakes and one for soils, in which the model was used to simulate the temporal chemical response of more than 750 individual sites (247 lake catchments; 510 soil polygons).

Regional aquifer parameters evaluated during mine depressurization in the Athabasca oil sands Alberta

Year of Publication: 1980

Abstract:
Withdrawal of groundwater for depressurization of the "water sands aquifer" under a test pit in the Athabasca Oil Sands of Alberta caused declines in hydraulic heads in two observation wells located 3700 and 6600 rn away. Analysis of these declines over a 6 month period by the time-drawdown method indicated transmissivity values of 68 m2/day for both wells. Pumping tests of 24 h duration had previously indicated that transmissivities at the two observation wells were 1.2 and 118 m2/day. Geological assessment of the water sands aquifer revealed that it is discontinuous between the test pit and the observation wells. Variations in lithology and heavy oil saturation as well as relief on the underlying limestone indicate that the water sands aquifer does not meet the "homogeneous and isotropic" criteria necessary for application of the Theis method of analysis. Nevertheless, the excellent fit of the time-drawdown data to the type curve and the identical values obtained for transmissivity indicate that the method can be used for pumping tests of long duration, which reflect conditions over extensive areas of the water sands aquifer.

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