"Where will you drive your own picket stake? Where will you choose to make your stand? Give me a threshold, a specific point at which you will finally stop running, at which you will finally fight back." (Derrick Jensen)
Devin Lavign wrote:Please do not get land next to a gold operation.
Yes they use cyanide and other very toxic chemicals in the processing of it. It never stays contained and always gets into the ground water. Longer they have been at the site worse off the contamination will be. With those water basins, please find another option.
It is likely due to this operation that that piece of land is available and priced nice enough to attract you. The old saying, "if it looks too good to be true, it probably is" likely applies to this situation.
There is a lot of people fighting the gold mining industry in my area due to what it has done to the water there.
I had a similar realization when I was looking for land. Not gold industry, but a leather tannery. I found what looked like a great place, but just a little ways away was an industrial tannery. Not only nasty stuff getting in the water from it, but also an aweful stink in the air.
"Where will you drive your own picket stake? Where will you choose to make your stand? Give me a threshold, a specific point at which you will finally stop running, at which you will finally fight back." (Derrick Jensen)
Devin Lavign wrote:I can see why you liked that spot with the larger view of the area. Indeed water is precious and so needed to succeed. That fan is a good area to try and locate near.
I really admire your goal, it is great to hear that you want to help the local community with your project.
I am sure you will get a lot of good advice here on this site. Some a lot more knowledgeable than me. I will do my best to give what answers I can though.
What I can tell you about your questions.
Both the toxins and the salt issue and distances is really tough to say for sure without knowledge of how deep the water table is, what the geology is, and other variables.
About salt. I live inland but grew up near the coast in the Pacific Northwest of the USA. We have a lot of farms that actually get very close to salt water without much problem. But it is also a temperate rainforest there. So a lot of fresh water running through the land that likely helps keep pressure on the salt water and keeps it out of the soil. In your area there, this likely is not be happening since water is so much less.
I would look less at distance and more elevation from the sea level. Looking for more than root depth of the trees you wish to plant above the level of high tide at sea level. I think that would be the best indicator of getting out of potential salty soil. (though I do not claim to be an expert at this, someone may correct me if I am wrong)
The gold "market" looks even more scary in reference to the land you liked with the bigger view as it looks pretty much like the land you liked is directly in the path water would mostly likely take both on surface as well as below. Like the fan from the water from he dam, I would try drawing a similar fan from the gold "market" of the down stream/slope areas and avoid any land within that section.
Hope this is helpful.
Devin Lavign wrote:Please do not get land next to a gold operation.
Yes they use cyanide and other very toxic chemicals in the processing of it. It never stays contained and always gets into the ground water. Longer they have been at the site worse off the contamination will be. With those water basins, please find another option.
Lukas Rohrbach wrote:
Devin Lavign wrote:Please do not get land next to a gold operation.
Yes they use cyanide and other very toxic chemicals in the processing of it. It never stays contained and always gets into the ground water. Longer they have been at the site worse off the contamination will be. With those water basins, please find another option.
Yes some mines are using cyanide and sulphuric acid for gold recovery, others are using harmless gravity circuits that don't use any chemicals at all. Since the operation is close to a river bed, I would suggest the latter (placer mining). If it even is a mine - there is no information on this, and sure there is no way to tell from a low resolution satellite image.
Some mining operations are environmentally safe, others are not. Some mines grow eatable fish in their wastewater ponds.
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