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Beaver Lake


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AB
Canada

Beaver Lake


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Location

AB
Canada

Beaver Lake


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Location

AB
Canada

Response of confined aquatic biota to mine depressurization water in Beaver Creek Reservoir


Year: 1980

Abstract:
Beaver Creek Reservoir was formed as a result of diverting the natural flow of Beaver Creek away from mine and plant areas and southward to the Athabasca River via Poplar Creek. The diversion was initiated in the fall of 1975 with the closure of the Beaver Creek Dam; filling of the reservoir was completed in the spring of 1976. When it became necessary to remove mine depressurization water from the mining area, Syncrude was granted permission by the Government of Alberta to discharge this effluent into Beaver Creek Reservoir, on the condition that chloride levels in water entering Poplar Creek did not exceed 400 mg/L above ambient levels. The present study was designed to investigate the survival of selected organisms in Beaver Creek Reservoir during 1979. The primary objective was to determine the response of selected species of aquatic biota to saline mine depressurization water after average dilution in the Beaver Creek Reservoir. More specific requirements of the study were: a) the study was to be carried out entirely within the Beaver Creek Reservoir using test organisms held in situ; b) the study must include three sampling locations and three replicates of each test organism at each station; c) test organisms must include: periphyton (on artificial substrates), native species of fish (white sucker and fathead minnow), and native species of invertebrates (either Gammarus or Hyalella); and d) field studies were to be conducted between June and October, 1979 and were to examine both short and long term effects.

Royal Society’s oil sands study ignores First Nations knowledge; Portrays incomplete and inaccurate picture of the destructive developments says Beaver Lake Cree Nation


Year: 2010

Abstract:
Dec. 17, 2010 ( Indigenous People's Issues Today delivered by Newstex) Alberta: Royal Society's Oil Sands Study Ignores First Nations Knowledge; Portrays Incomplete And Inaccurate Picture Of The Destructive Developments Says Beaver Lake Cree Nation Royal Society's oil sands study ignores First Nations knowledge; portrays incomplete and inaccurate picture of the destructive developments says Beaver Lake Cree Nation A new 438-page study of Alberta's tar sands by a team at the Royal Society makes many strong criticisms of the tar sands developments but lacks of respect and regard for traditional knowledge, says the Chief and Council of Beaver...

Sand and soil: Ecological management and the framing of Mildred Lake


Author(s): Ritts, M. J.

Year: 2010

Abstract:
This paper explores representations of nature that emerge through the ecological management of Mildred Lake, Syncrude’s Alberta-based oil sands extraction facility. Examining the ways Mildred Lake’s ecology has been re-presented by site eco-management teams, I argue that technologically produced visions help reproduce the regime of power infusing a state-sanctioned scientific practice of eco- management. ‘Using governmentality theory, Chapter 1 contextualizes activities at Mildred Lake: I show how the Alberta government, tethering the growth of the oil sands to technological innovation, submits eco-management questions to a capital-driven state-developmental framework. Chapter 2 examines how state-sanctioned science is discursively performed through eco-management acts. Chapter 3 uses a case study approach to consider three Mildred Lake eco-management projects: Beaver Creek, the Tailings Pond, and reclamation. While Mildred Lake’s eco-management practices cannot withstand critical scrutiny, they reveal the culturally and ecologically significant transformations of nature required to sustain authority amid the destructive effects of bitumen extraction.

Tarred Industry


Author(s): Lim, A.

Year: 2014

Abstract:
The article discusses the issue of tailings ponds which are a toxic byproduct of tar sands processing for the oil industry in Alberta, Canada. Topics include how the tailings ponds contaminate the Athabasca River, the Mackenzie river, and the Arctic Ocean, how the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation (ACFN) is working to stop pollution, and how native tribes, rather than federal environmental protections, are working to protect water sources. INSET: FIRST NATIONS.

Citation:
Lim, A. (2014).  Tarred Industry. Nation. 299, 1 page. Abstract

The impact of beaver dams on the design and construction of reclaimed mine sites


Year: 2000

Abstract:
The 1990 failure of the Matachewan Consolidated Gold tailings dam in Ontario should have been a wake-up call to the mining industry. Beavers blocked the spillway of this abandoned tailings darn causing the reservoir to overtop, and toxic tailings to be released into the Ottawa River. Almost ten years later, most miners remain unaware of the risk of beaver darns to post-closure landscapes. There is little guidance about how to assess the risk of beaver dams and how to design reclaimed landscapes to endure beaver activity. As part of its investigations into creating sustainable landscapes at its oils sands mining operations, Syncrude Canada Ltd. conducted an interdisciplinary study of beaver dams in northeastern Alberta. The program included observations from visits to over 70 beaver dams and 29 lake outlets, cataloguing of 784 dams from aerial photographs, and review of over 350 books and articles on beaver behaviour. The program confirmed that beaver activity, especially dam building, has a profound effect on the natural landscape. Beaver dams block streams and lake outlets, attenuate flows, divert streams, flood large areas, trap sediment, create beaver meadows, trigger landslides, and significantly alter the boreal forest ecology. Beaver dams can reach three to four metres high and be over a kilometer long - no stream is too small to dam and few rivers are too large. Large dams can be constructed in just a few days and can be repaired overnight. Beaver colonies can consume up to a hectare of deciduous forest per year and a beaver pond can affect tens of hectares of forest. Outburst flooding of abandoned beaver dams has caused numerous cases of damage to infrastructure. Proceedings of the 24th Annual British Columbia Mine Reclamation Symposium in Williams Lake, BC, 2000. The Technical and Research Committee on Reclamation. Reclaimed landscapes must be designed to encourage, discourage, or, in most cases, accommodate beaver behaviour. The cost of building landscapes to accommodate beavers can be significant, although retrofitting previously reclaimed areas is even more expensive. Even given the best design and construction, residual risks remain owing to extreme beaver behaviour and the prohibitive cost of designing for all risks. Because beaver behaviour varies geographically, a local study of dams would be required to adapt landscape design parameters for mines in other regions.

Traditional land use setting report for the Suncor Voyageur South Project


Author(s): Goodjohn, M.

Year: 2007

Abstract:
This traditional land use setting report compliments and extends information collected for the Suncor Steepbank Mine Project, Millennium Project, South Tailings Project and the Voyageur project. Senior and, in some cases, junior trapline holders of RFMA #s 578, 2156, 1790, 2676 were interviewed for the report. Aboriginal participants include members of Fort McKay First Nation and Métis. The report focuses on historic and current traditional land use within the Voyageur South Project Area. Suncor also provided a week long camp-over program where traditionally used plant species were documented by members of Fort McKay First Nation. At the time that this Traditional Land Use Setting Report was released, the report for the camping trip was still being written by Fort McKay First Nation. Likewise, Mikisew Cree First Nation were still in the process of completing their traditional land use study at the time of writing.

Understanding traditional use studies: Aboriginal traditions and knowledge. People of the boreal forest photo gallery.


Year: 2009

Abstract:
This gallery of photographs taken by Terry Garvin over a period of 50 years is a dynamic part of the People of the Boreal Forest Website, which is part of the Alberta Online Encyclopedia. The site was developed as an Aboriginal Centennial project by the Heritage Community Foundation in partnership with Terry Garvin and the Aseniwuche Winewak First Nation. Funding support was provided by Alberta Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development (now Alberta Aboriginal Relations).

Water quality and aquatic resources of the Beaver Creek diversion, 1977


Author(s): Noton, L. R., & Chymko N. R.

Year: 1978

Abstract:
The Beaver Creek Diversion System was investigated from March to November, 1977, to describe post-diversion conditions in Beaver Creek, Ruth Lake and Poplar Creek and to characterize the two newly created water bodies in the system. Ten sites in the system were sampled regularly for physical-chemical parameters, phytoplankton, zooplankton and benthic macroinvertebrates. Additional surveys were done for fish, aquatic macrophytes, stream drift and stream habitat.

Wood bison and the early fur trade


Author(s): Ferguson, T. A.

Year: 1993

Abstract:
The intent of this paper is to present data from fur trade records documenting the depletion of the northern Alberta wood bison, or buffalo, as perceived by fur traders prior to 1840 and to consider the implications of these data for temporary game management strategies, especially involving Aboriginal harvesters.

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