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Mammalian toxicity of naphthenic acids derived from the Athabasca oil sands


Author(s): Rogers, V. V.

Year: 2003

Abstract:
Naphthenic acids are a diverse group of saturated mono- and polycyclic carboxylic acids that are natural constituents of petroleum. These compounds are a major contributor to petroleum's acidic nature and can account for as much as 4% of crude petroleum by weight. At the Athabasca oil sands (AOS) located in northeastern Alberta, Canada, naphthenic acids have received considerable attention. The AOS represent the world's largest, single petroleum deposit, where the petroleum is in the form of bitumen. Extracting bitumen from AOS is a complex process, requiring the mixing of oil sands with hot,alkaline (pH = 8.0) water to separate the bitumen from sand and other waste products. This process produces an immense volume of aqueous tailings, about 7.5 m 3 for each m3 of synthetic crude petroleum produced. Nearly one billion cubic meters of aqueous tailings will have amassed in large holding ponds near the mine sites by 2025, and will be incorporated into the ecosystem under wet and dry landscape reclamation strategies. Another consequence of the extraction process is that naphthenic acids (pKa ≅ 5) become solubilized and concentrated (90--110 mg/L) in aqueous tailings. Numerous studies have investigated the aquatic toxicity of naphthenic acids, demonstrating them to be highly toxic to invertebrates and fish at concentrations well below those found in AOS tailings. In contrast, information about the mammalian toxicity of naphthenic acids is limited, particularly the effects of repeated, oral exposure. In the current research, naphthenic acids were isolated from tailings obtained from Mildred Lake settling basin, the main tailings pond of Syncrude Canada Ltd, and used in mammalian toxicity testing. An acidification/solvent extraction procedure was used, followed by ultrafiltration to isolate the naphthenic acids. These were chemically analysed, revealing a highly heterogenous mixture of acyclic and 1-, 2-, 3-, and 4-ringed compounds. Acute testing using Wistar rats demonstrated significant (P < 0.05) behavioural and histopathological effects in both sexes at a single dosage of 300 mg/kg body weight of napthenic acids. This dosage is 50 times higher than the estimated worst-case, single day environmental exposure through drinking water for small mammals in the wild. Effects included temporary suppression of appetite, and pericholangitis, a biliary inflammatory response. Subchronic dosing, involving administration of naphthenic acids to females over a 90 d period, indicated that 60 mg/kg/d was sufficient to elicit significant (P < 0.05), toxic effects.

Mapping how we use our land: Using participatory action research


Year: 1994

Abstract:
The study area of the traditional land use and occupancy study profiled in this booklet is broadly speaking northeast Alberta, south of the Clearwater River, west of the Alberta/Saskatchewan border, north of the Cold Lake air weapons range and east of the Athabasca River. In this region Athapaskan, Cree, and Métis people have mixed with Euro-Canadians engaged in the fur trade since the arrival of Peter Pond in 1780. The area generally opened up to settlement with steamboats on the Athabasca, the Alberta and Great Waterways Railway and the impetus created by World War II to construct roads into the region. By the 1950s the industrial economy was becoming more and more established and Aboriginal participation in wage work began to increase. Through the 1960s and 1970s with the establishment of new tar sands plants with state of the art technology, Fort McMurray became a Canadian boom town, and there was less and less incentive for Aboriginal people to maintain a full-time presence in the bush economy. Trapping, hunting, fishing and gathering became part-time activities for most, and thousands of outsiders also began to hunt and fish in the Aboriginal homelands with the assistance of seismic access roads, four-wheel-drive vehicles and float planes. Life for regional residents continues to change at a fast pace as the Alberta-Pacific pulp mill comes on stream and tar sands projects are expanded. These factors provided the incentive for the Athabasca Native Development Corporation to undertake the traditional land use and occupancy study described in this booklet.

Mercury in the lower Athabasca River and its watershed


Author(s): Radmanovich, R.

Year: 2013

Abstract:
This study assessed the geographic distribution of mercury in water, and biota of the Athabasca River, and in snow and vegetation in its watershed. Mercury in the snowpack was significantly elevated within 46km of oil sands development relative to greater distances. Mercury was significantly higher in tributaries more disturbed by oil sands development relative to less disturbed watersheds. Mercury in vegetation was elevated near development, but was higher at moderate distances from development, likely due to differences in atmospheric speciation within upgrader plumes compared to speciation within the downwind atmosphere. Mercury concentrations were significantly higher in Walleye, Northern Pike, and Goldeye compared to Lake Whitefish. A large percentage (72-80%) of Northern Pike, Goldeye, and Walleye exceeded the Health Canada fish consumption guideline for frequent consumers. The spatial distribution of mercury within the Athabasca River and its watershed indicates oil sands development is a significant source of mercury within the region.

Metrics for assessing fisheries productivity and offsetting strategies under Canada’s New Fisheries Act


Year: 2014

Abstract:
The Alberta oil sands region contains one of the world’s largest oil deposits, estimated at 1.7 trillion barrels. Development in this region can have negative effects for aquatic species, governed under Canada’s Fisheries Act. The Fisheries Act allows the possibility for offsetting losses in fisheries productivity, e.g., through the creation of compensation lakes. Offsetting strategies are becoming increasingly important for large-scale developments such as mining operations in the oil sands region; they allow for development while ensuring that the project has ‘no net loss’ in fisheries productivity. In 2012, omnibus Bill C-38 fundamentally changed large sections of the federal Fisheries Act. The focus of fisheries management was shifted from the protection of fish habitat in general to ensuring the ongoing productivity (FP) of fish important to commercial, recreational and aboriginal (CRA) fisheries. Further, the changes formalized the use of offsetting strategies to compensate for damage to fish caused by development. The changes marked the move from the fisheries habitat management program (FHMP) as implemented prior to 2012, to the fisheries protection program (FPP). The goal of the FPP is to “provide for the sustainability and ongoing productivity of commercial, recreational and Aboriginal fisheries”. Lack of standardized protocols and procedures following a shift of this magnitude could not only result in considerable additional expenses for industry, but also in less reproducible and so less reliable results. Rapid standardization of best practices and data collection methods would help ensure cost-efficient, meaningful and transferable data. Currently, these best management practices are being determined through an ongoing process involving Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO), industrial partners and government officials. The aim is to define a standard set of indicators for use under the FPP framework and assess which models may suitable for forming the link between data sets and long-term projections for whole-population productivity. The interpretation of the changes to the Fisheries Act has been subject to controversy, making concise and publically available information important. Numerous scientific advisory reports have been published by DFO. However, there is currently a shortage of documents that give an overview over the scientific background necessary to understand how the changes may affect management practices, taking into account knowledge gaps and limitations in terms of data collection techniques. In this report, we will review existing monitoring tools as well as how the changes in policies associated with the shift from the FHMP to the FPP may affect management protocols. Under the FHMP, the conceptual endpoint for assessing the impacts of development on fisheries was to achieve no net loss of the productive capacity of fish habitat (PC). Habitat was quantified mainly by area, and the success of an offsetting project was often determined mainly through acceptable installation. Methods in use under the FHMP provided only approximate values for PC. For a meaningful planning, measurement and monitoring protocol that can help ensure fisheries productivity under the FPP, it may be necessary to move away from the previous practice of managing fish habitat in Canada based on the use of FP as a theoretical concept only. As productivity in itself is difficult to measure directly, it is necessary to find appropriate indicators that can link changes in the components of productivity of individual fish or subsections of populations to changes in population-level fisheries productivity. We have compiled a list of indicators that may be used for estimating productivity of fisheries populations. Solid measurements of fisheries productivity require repeated monitoring protocols extended over multiple years as well as a broadening of the definition of habitat affected by development. The financially and ecologically prohibitive nature of obtaining comprehensive, long-term data sets may make models an essential tool for linking limited data on subsets of populations with whole-population productivity and long-term projections. However, the trade-off between strength of model predictions and quality and quantity of data may make it a challenge to strike the balance between data needs for accurate predictions and financial feasibility. In using knowledge-based standards for planning and executing compensation lake development, a key parameter to evaluate would be the carrying capacity of various compensation lake ecosystems. It may be a challenge to ensure an appropriate agreement between offsetting indicators and environmental assessment indicators, as established ecosystems are compared with populations in the process of establishing in a newly expanded habitat. On the other hand, lack of density dependence in the early establishment phase gives good possibilities for providing solid estimates of intrinsic growth rate of the populations within this specific habitat. Future research should be conducted for areas characterized by intensive development to create models that allow for robust estimates of productivity based on limited and specific indicators that are manageable to measure. As factors limiting fisheries productivity vary between species, habitats and regions, it is likely that this would have to occur through the development of models specific for the given habitats and geographical areas. If the drivers of the ecosystem in question are not well studied, the most cost-effective and ecologically sound way of implementing the FPP may be to adopt the management practices of the FHMP largely unaltered, but with the interpretive end goal shifted to FP. This would only require a mandatory inclusion of population level data in the monitoring protocols, and an extended monitoring period of several years. All of this constitutes protocols already in use under the FHMP. Though much work has been done on measuring and modelling the productivity of fish populations, it has proven difficult or impossible to find simple, reproducible techniques that can be applied across habitat types and ecosystems. In our opinion, the best predictors for fisheries productivity remain the quantity and quality of available fish habitat combined with abundance, size structure data and species composition within the given habitats.

Molecular identification of a yellow perch viral disease associated with exposure to oil sands process affected waters (PO)


Year: 2011

Abstract:
Large volumes of tailings and process affected water are generated as a result of oil sand mining processes. This presentation discussed the safe incorporation of these wastes into the terrestrial and aquatic landscape. A study was conducted in which yellow perch were stocked into experimental ponds, namely Demonstration Pond and South Bison Pond, during the periods of 1995-1997 and 2008-2010. Demonstration Pond was comprised of mature fine tailings capped with natural surface water, while South Bison Pond was formed at a site surrounded by overburden or lean oil sands. Disease surveys were conducted at these experimental ponds and also at Mildred, Sucker, and Kimowin Lakes. External white nodular lesions, characteristic of lymphocystis disease were observed on perch at all sites except Kimowin Lake. The identity of the virus was confirmed by DNA extraction and PCR with genotype generic major capsid protein gene primers. The presence of lymphocystis disease virus in perch was confirmed through sequencing of PCR results. The viral genotype appeared to be different from any previously isolated viral genotype. During the course of the study, there was an increasing incidence of the disease at Demonstration Pond and a decreasing incidence at the South Bison Pond. The intensity of the disease was found to be proportional to the incidence, which was positively correlated with changes in naphthenic acid concentration.

Nutrient enrichment in the Peace Athabasca and Slave River: Assessment of present conditions and future trends


Author(s): Chambers, P. A.

Year: 1996

Abstract:
The aim of this report was to address the Northern River Basins Study (NRBS) question: “Are the substances added to the rivers by natural and manmade discharges likely to cause deterioration of the water quality?” In this report, the word “substances” was taken to mean nutrients or, more specifically, nitrogen and phosphorus. Other NRBS reports have addressed the impact of effluent loading from the perspective of contaminants. This report synthesizes results from research and monitoring studies undertaken as part of the NRBS to characterize nutrient loading from all point and diffuse sources in the Northern River basins, evaluate the impacts of nutrient loading on river chemistry, assess the response of riverine biota to nutrient loading from pulp mill and municipal effluents in situ, quantify nutrient responses of benthic biota, and investigate interactions between nutrients and contaminants in pulp mill effluent on food webs. These findings are used to assess the state of aquatic ecosystem health, and develop scientific and management recommendations for the Northern River basins. During fall, winter and spring, elevated nitrogen and phosphorus concentrations were observed on the Athabasca River downstream of Jasper, Hinton, Whitecourt and Fort McMurray and on the Wapiti River downstream of Grande Prairie. In the Athabasca River, 20% of all TP samples and 2% of all TN samples exceeded the Alberta Surface Water Quality Objective of 0.05 mg/L TP as P and 1.0 mg/L TN as N. Most of these exceedances occurred during summer and were likely due to high particulate concentrations. In the Wapiti River, 74% of TP samples and 19% of TN samples collected near the mouth exceeded the Alberta Surface Water Quality Objectives compared with exceedances of only 12% for TP and 0% for TN upstream of Grande Prairie. This suggests that nutrients from the City of Grande Prairie and Weyerhaeuser of Canada Ltd. effluents contribute to non-compliance. Annually, continuously-discharging industrial and municipal sources contribute 4 to 10% of the TN load and 6 to 16% of the TP load in the Athabasca River, with the contribution being higher during winter. Likewise, continuously- discharging industrial and municipal sources contribute 20% of the TN and 22% of the TP load in the Wapiti River annually. For the Peace River mainstem there is no evidence of nutrient impacts and the same is likely, true for the Slave River, although there are only limited nutrient data for this river. Elevated nutrient concentrations in the Athabasca and Wapiti rivers have increased periphyton biomass and benthic invertebrate densities and, for the Athabasca River downstream of Hinton, increased the length and body weight of spoonhead sculpin (Cottus ricei), a small insectivorous fish species. Enrichment studies conducted with nutrient diffusing substrata in fall 1994 showed that periphyton growth was nutrient saturated for at least 2.5-4 km downstream of Jasper, from downstream of Hinton to upstream of Whitecourt, for at least 3 km and possibly up to 48 km downstream of Fort McMurray, and for at least 2 km downstream of the Grande Prairie bleached kraft pulp mill. Phosphorus concentrations at sites immediately upstream of the outfalls to these nutrient-saturated reaches were usually < 2 g/L SRP in the Athabasca River and 4-6 g/L SRP in the Wapiti River. These concentrations are similar to the 2-5 g/L SRP that was determined to be the concentration above which the growth of individual cells and thin periphyton films in artificial streams are phosphorus saturated. Periphyton growth was nitrogen limited from downstream of the Alberta Newsprint Co. to the confluence of Lesser Slave River and in the Smoky River. The increase in periphyton biomass and benthic invertebrate densities downstream of effluent outfalls and, in the case of the benthic invertebrates, no loss of species suggests that the response to effluents is one of nutrient enrichment not toxicity. Studies conducted in artificial streams further showed that periphyton biomass and growth of several mayflies, stoneflies and caddisflies increased in response to nutrient or 1% effluent addition, with no significant difference between the two treatments. These results further verify that the response to the current level of effluent loading is one of nutrient enrichment. There is no evidence of adverse effects to the ecosystem (e.g., no benthic invertebrate species loss, no problems with dissolved oxygen levels that are directly caused by nutrient addition). While detailed investigations of spawning grounds and early rearing habitat for fish in the Northern Rivers were not undertaken, it does appear not that dissolved oxygen problems caused by nutrient addition are adversely affecting fish populations at present. The concern with nutrient addition to the Athabasca and Wapiti rivers appears, at present, to be largely one of aesthetics as perceived by increased periphyton growth. Aesthetic criteria for the protection of water bodies are often site specific and developed in consensus with the users of the lake or river. In the absence of any detectable deleterious effects of nutrient loading on the Athabasca and Wapiti rivers, the users must determine whether the increase in periphyton growth downstream of outfalls is acceptable or unacceptable. Given our current state of knowledge, setting effluent permit limits for phosphorus to control periphyton biomass at a specific level is not possible since there is as yet no quantitative relationship between river phosphorus concentrations and periphyton biomass for a given site. For example, periphyton biomass 1 km downstream of Hinton was found to range from 25 to 242 mg chlo/m2 for October 1990, 1992, 1993 and 1994 despite relatively constant TP loads from Weldwood of Canada Ltd. and relatively constant river flows (111, 134, 97 and 118 m3/s for October 1990, 1992, 1993 and 1994, respectively). Yet despite the lack of site-specific quantitative relationships between periphyton biomass and phosphorus concentration, experiments and in situ observations undertaken by the NRBS and other agencies have clearly shown that phosphorus (and, in some locations, nitrogen) are controlling factors for periphyton abundance in the Athabasca, Wapiti and Smoky rivers. Based on findings from studies reviewed in this synthesis report, the following key recommendations are proposed: • regular monitoring and reporting of nutrients from sewage treatment plants. This should be a license requirement. In addition, provision is needed for ensuring compliance with sampling and analytical procedures for all licensed dischargers (industrial and municipal) and to ensure training of certified operators to measure (and record) flow rates and discharge volumes and for enforcement of reporting requirements. Standard reporting requirements for water quality parameters should be established and reporting proper data should be a license requirement.

Past, present, and future land use of Swan River First Nation


Author(s): Dersch, A. T.

Year: 2011

Abstract:
This dissertation examines past, present, and future land use of Swan River First Nation whose reserves are on the south central shore of Lesser Slave Lake, Alberta, Canada. In this dissertation the theoretical perspective of Indigenous archaeology is utilized as is an interdisciplinary approach whereby western science and traditional knowledge as well as social science and natural science are used. This dissertation presents how and where Swan River First Nation exercised their Treaty Rights to hunt, fish, trap, and gather in the past and documents baseline conditions regarding current infringements to Swan River First Nation's ability to practise these rights. It discusses the present context and issues associated with Aboriginal consultation in Alberta with regards to both infringements to Treaty Rights and archaeology. It also applies Swan River First Nation traditional knowledge to subarctic ethnoarchaeology. Finally, it creates a Treaty Rights based land use plan to ensure that Swan River First Nation can practise their rights into the future as well as a methodology for modeling high archaeological potential based on traditional land use and vegetation communities to be used in future archaeological research.

Persistent organic contaminants in sediments and biota of Great Slave Lake, Canada: Slave River and long-range atmospheric source influences


Author(s): Evans, M. S., & Muir D. C. G.

Year: 2016

Abstract:
Over 1993–1996, we conducted a series of studies to investigate the distributions of legacy persistent organic pollutants (POPs) in the West Basin and East Arm of Great Slave Lake with a focus on sediments and fish species common in traditional diets; lesser attention was paid to polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and chemicals associated with pulp and paper mill activity. The Slave River, formed by the confluence of the Peace and Athabasca Rivers, profoundly affects the limnology of the West Basin by transporting large quantities of water and suspended sediments into the lake. Most POPs occurred in substantially higher concentrations in sediments offshore of the Slave River inflow than in the remote East Arm where long-range atmospheric transport was inferred to be the primary source. POP concentrations tended to be higher in East Arm than the West Basin fish possibly because the low productivity of the East Arm provides less opportunity for contaminant dilution through fish growth and the adsorption onto organic particulates in the water column. Overall, POP concentrations were relatively low in plankton, lake trout fillet and burbot liver from both regions of the lake and generally comparable to other lakes located at similar latitudes. Since 1998, we have been monitoring POPs, mercury and other contaminants in lake trout and burbot under the Northern Contaminants Program in which we are contributing to national and international reporting and to the global understanding of contaminants and climate change on northern and other environments.

Phylogeography and postglacial dispersal of two North American Salvelinus species


Author(s): Wilson, C. C.

Year: 1995

Abstract:
Although the profound impacts of Pleistocene glaciations on the North American aquatic fauna are indisputable, reconstructions of postglacial recolonization are extremely difficult due to the complexity of habitat alterations and glacial retreat. This study examines patterns of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) diversity in lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) and arctic charr (Salvelinus alpinus) to assess their phylogeographic structure and postglacial dispersal. Phylogeographic results for both species contrasted with literature predictions, but were concordant with dispersal scenarios based on glaciochronology and species ecology. Restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis of mtDNA revealed five distinct refugial groups of S. namaycush that diverged 100,000-800,000 years ago. Screening of 123 populations showed that fish from two Beringian refugia colonized much of arctic and western Canada and dispersed as far east as western Quebec. Mississippian fish dispersed throughout central Canada, while eastern North America was recolonized from an Atlantic source. Fish from a fifth refuge are largely limited to Montana and southern Alberta. Refugial groups showed extensive secondary contact within margins of former proglacial lakes, producing high levels of nucleotide diversity for mixed-source populations. Geographic distance and genetic divergence among refugial groups were not correlated, contrasting with patterns for southern fish species. RFLP analysis of North American S. alpinus mtDNA revealed three major lineages with differing geographic distributions. Screening of 54 populations showed that two lineages that diverged 120,000-250,000 years ago in separate Atlantic refugia showed clinal distributions along the Atlantic coast. By contrast, northern Alaska and arctic Canada were colonized by Beringian fish, which diverged from eastern populations one to two million years ago. In contrast to lake trout, secondary contact among arctic charr lineages was extremely limited. Combined morphometric, allozyme, and RFLP analyses also documented widespread hybridization between S. namaycush and S. alpinus across the Canadian arctic. Hybridization was strongly asymmetrical, with 87% of $\rm F\sb1$ hybrids resulting from crosses between female S. namaycush and male S. alpinus. Detailed examination of two populations containing hybrids revealed low levels of bidirectional nuclear introgression between the species but only limited transfer of S. namaycush mtDNA into S. alpinus.

Polar Lakes and Rivers: Limnology of Arctic and Antarctic Aquatic Ecosystems


Year: 2009

Abstract:
Lakes, ponds, rivers and streams are prominent features of the Arctic landscape and are also common in many parts of Antarctica. These waters encompass a remarkable variety of conditions for aquatic life, and are proving to be attractive model systems for exploring general ecological themes. Some of these ecosystems have direct global implications, and are also sentinels of global climate change. This book brings together many of the world's leading researchers in polar limnology to describe these diverse aquatic environments and their ecology. It introduces each major ecosystem type including extreme ice shelf and glacial meltwaters; subglacial lakes and rivers; perennially ice-capped lakes; meromictic and epishelf lake systems; tundra lakes and ponds; seasonal streams; and the large Arctic rivers with their associated floodplain lakes. Separate chapters review the geomorphology of polar lake basins, high latitude paleolimnology; biogeochemistry; physical limnology; microbial processes; microbial biodiversity and biogeography; benthic photosynthetic communities including microbial mats and mosses; phytoplankton and primary production; zooplankton and benthic invertebrates; the ecology of high Arctic fish; food web structure and dynamics; and new and emerging themes in high latitude limnology. The book incorporates the overriding theme of climate change impacts as well as direct impacts resulting from human activity.

Preliminary recommendations for mapping of aquatic habitat parameters for the AOSERP study area


Year: 1978

Abstract:
Three aspects of aquatic habitat assessment and mapping have been considered. The first aspect was the review of the parameters which characterize aquatic habitats in the AOSERP study area. From an extensive list, ten parameters for each of lake habitats and river habitats were selected as being of greatest significance. Those in common to lakes and rivers include: dominant fish species, dominant invertebrate groups, maximum temperature, minimum oxygen, substrate codominants and turbidity. Those characteristic of rivers only are rooted width, gradient, and velocity, while those characteristic of lakes only are maximum depth, percent littoral area, and percent surface area occupied by aquatic macrophytes. An efficient procedure for collecting the data pertaining to those parameters over a large area is recommended. This procedure includes: a watershed coding system, remote sensing analysis, preliminary mapping, helicopter surveys, and ground sampling programs. Finally, a key was developed for mapping the aquatic habitat parameters at a scale of 1:50,000. The second aspect was the review of the application of remote sensing data to the interpretation and assessment of aquatic habitats. This applicability of several sensors, such as black and white panchromatic, colour, colour IR, black and white IR, thermal IR, SLAR, multispectral sensors, and LANDSAT sensors, to the assessment of aquatic habitat parameters is presented. The properties which are most readily distinguished are illustrated with representative photographs. The technical considerations which must be made when planning a remote sensing data gathering mission are discussed. These factors include film and filter combinations, altitudes, time of day, time of year, and other considerations. The third aspect was the review of the state of the art in computerized mapping techniques. This review includes levels of data processing and their application, the data encoding processes, map creation and presentation, and user competence requirements. It is recommended that a detailed comparative review of three of the most advanced computerized mapping systems be undertaken. The application of computerized mapping to AOSERP must be carefully assessed, and should be undertaken only if all resource and land management data for the study area are to be included in the project.

Proceedings of Alberta oil sands tailings wastewater treatment technology workshop


Author(s): Baddaloo, E. G. Y.

Year: 1986

Abstract:
Syncrude Canada Limited’s Fort McMurray oi1 sands mining operations has been operating under the concept of zero discharge and total containment of wastewaters since start up in 1978. During this period a considerable volume of contaminated water has been assimulated in a large on-site tailings pond at a substantial costs to the company. This zero discharge philosophy has provided time for a large amount of research to be carried out. Syncrude has requested that Alberta Environment consider controlled (release/reclamation) discharge of treated water as part of the waste control guidelines for the plant; however, as witnessed by recent concerns (i.e., Great Lake Pollution, Edmonton drinking water, etc.), discharge criteria must not only address acute toxicity, but also contaminants that are biologically active in small concentrations over long chronic exposures. This will be necessary for the protection of downstream users (drinking water, sport and commercial fisheries, subsistence fishery, etc.). It is prudent also, that the companies involved should address their major environmental problems while in operation, rather than leaving them for future generations. In response to the formal request from Syncrude to establish discharge criteria for the treatment and release/reclamation of tailings pond water, a departmenta1 committee was formed within Alberta Environment. Meetings have been held and Syncrude has provided an assessment of the treatability of its pond water in relation to the department's \"Wastewater Effluent Guidelines for Alberta Petroleum Refineries\" (1976). In addition to industry research, the federal government’s Panel on Energy Research and Development (PERD) has been funding various projects. Members of the Wastewater Technology Centre in Burlington have also been invited by Syncrude to participate in these studies. To assess the status of collective knowledge and to co-operate/co-ordinate/set priorities for future research, a two-day workshop was planned with industry, public, and various governmental departments and agencies. The goals of the workshop were: 1. To enable free exchange of information and ideas among the various invited groups; 2. To identify priority areas of research and to assist in providing a co-operative effort in order to deal with them; 3. To ensure that research carried out by industry, government, agencies, and the public is well directed and co-ordinated; and 4. To initiate the idea of a co-operative effort with regard to research planning and development to use funds (provided jointly or otherwise) in an efficient manner. The workshop was held on 1985 October 29 and 30 at Mildred Lake Research Station in Fort McMurray, Alberta. It was the first time major issues regarding Alberta oil sands tailings pond had been dealt with by a group comprising industry, federal and provincial governments, agencies, and the public (invited but unable to attend).

Radionuclide levels in fish from Lake Athabasca, February, 1993


Author(s): Smithson, G.

Year: 1993

Abstract:
The Northern River Basins study was initiated in 1991 to understand and characterize the cumulative effects of development on the water and aquatic environment of the Peace, Slave, and Athabasca Rivers. Extensive uranium mine-mill operations were in place around Lake Athabasca from the 1950s to the 1980s and some mining continues today. Residents of the area are concerned that tailings from these mines may enter Lake Athabasca causing radioisotope contamination of the fish. The study performed radiochemical analysis and biological examinations of northern pike, suckers, and lake whitefish collected in February 1993 from Lake Athabasca near Bustard Island and Hook Point. A complete analysis for all the major, naturally occurring radioisotopes was conducted and the fish were examined for abnormal growth problems or diseases. This report describes the results of the analysis.

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