UNBC research discovers copper “surges” in Quesnel Lake
PRINCE GEORGE – Every winter since the tailings pond breach at the Mount Polley mine in 2014, copper-laden sediment from the bottom of Quesnel Lake has been re-suspended in the water column and has flowed into the Quesnel River affecting aquatic life in the watershed, according to a new paper by UNBC researchers Dr. Phil Owens and Dr. Ellen Petticrew.
Lakes turnover every year when the temperature changes, with water from the bottom of the lake rising and water closer to the surface moving to the bottom. This process lifts the copper-rich mine tailings and other sedimentary material from the bottom of the lake and the current takes it downstream to the Quesnel River, a tributary of the Fraser River. Published in the journal Science of the Total Environment, the paper details how this process results in seasonal copper levels in the Quesnel River that at times exceed federal guidelines for the protection of aquatic life.
The paper titled Annual pulses of copper-enriched sediment in a North American river downstream of a large lake following the catastrophic failure of a mine tailings storage facility includes co-authors from the University of British Columbia, Fisheries and Oceans Canada and other UNBC researchers.
