U.S. Geological
Survey
Open-File Report 01-142
Digital Database of Mining-Related Features at Selected Historic and Active Phosphate Mines, Bannock, Bear Lake, Bingham, and Caribou Counties, Idaho
By
J. Douglas Causey and Phillip R. Moyle
|
This report
provides a description of data and processes used to produce a spatial
database that delineates mining-related features in areas of historic
and active phosphate mining in the core of the southeastern Idaho phosphate
resource area. The data have varying degrees of accuracy and attribution
detail. Classification of areas by type of mining-related activity at
active mines is generally detailed; however, the spatial coverage does
not differentiate mining-related surface disturbance features at many
of the closed or inactive mines. Nineteen
phosphate mine sites are included in the study. A total of 5,728 hc (14,154
ac), or more than 57 km2 (22 mi2), of phosphate
mining-related surface disturbance are documented in the spatial coverage
of the core of the southeast Idaho phosphate resource area. The study
includes 4 active phosphate minesDry Valley, Enoch Valley, Rasmussen
Ridge, and Smoky Canyonand 15 historic phosphate minesBallard,
Champ, Conda, Diamond Gulch, Gay, Georgetown Canyon, Henry, Home Canyon,
Lanes Creek, Maybe Canyon, Mountain Fuel, Trail Canyon, Rattlesnake Canyon,
Waterloo, and Wooley Valley. Spatial data on the inactive historic mines
is relatively up-to-date; however, spatially described areas for active
mines are based on digital maps prepared in early 1999. The inactive Gay
mine has the largest total area of disturbance: 1,917 hc (4,736 ac) or
about 19 km2 (7.4 mi2). It encompasses over three
times the disturbance area of the next largest mine, the Conda mine with
607 hc (1,504 ac), and it is nearly four times the area of the Smoky Canyon
mine, the largest of the active mines with 497 hc (1,228 ac). The wide range of phosphate mining-related surface disturbance features (approximately 80) were reduced to 13 types or features used in this studyadit and pit, backfilled mine pit, facilities, mine pit, ore stockpile, railroad, road, sediment catchment, tailings or tailings pond, topsoil stockpile, water reservoir, and disturbed land (undifferentiated). In summary, the spatial coverage includes polygons totaling 1,114 hc (2,753 ac) of mine pits, 272 hc (671 ac) of backfilled mine pits, 1,570 hc (3,880 ac) of waste dumps, 26 hc (64 ac) of ore stockpiles, and 44 hc (110 ac) of tailings or tailings ponds. Areas of undifferentiated phosphate mining-related land disturbances, called disturbed land, total 2,176 (5,377 ac) or nearly 21.8 km2 (8.4 mi2). No determination has been made as to status of reclamation on these lands. Subsequent site-specific studies to delineate distinct mine features will allow modification of this preliminary spatial database. |
Download the entire report as a PDF document (1 MB)
Download phosmine.e00 (4.4 MB), which is an Arc export format file of the phosphate mine features
Download phosmine.met (24 KB), the FGDC-compliant metadata for this report
Download phosmine.zip (1.2 MB), which is phosmine.e00 and the metadata as a zipped file
For questions about the content of this report, contact Doug Causey
Download a copy of Acrobat Reader version 5.0 for free
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Maintained by: Carolyn Donlin
Created: 8-21-01
Last modified: 9-25-01 (cad)
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