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The St Louis River of Northern Minnesota will be as Vulnerable to Annihilation as were Brazil’s Rio Doce and Paraobeba Rivers (pictured below) – if the PolyMet Project is Allowed to Proceed

 

(Trying to understand why every Brazilian mining catastrophe has been blacked-out by the Duluth News-Tribune)

 

The photos and videos in this supplemental Duty to Warn column need to be viewed by everybody living downstream from the proposed PolyMet mine tailings lagoon – scheduled to be built near Hoyt Lakes, Minnesota, a St Louis River river-town in northeast Minnesota. Hoyt Lakes is the northernmost of the 12 river towns on the St Louis River estuary which empties into Lake Superior, the least polluted of the Great Lakes. Superior is the largest freshwater lake in the world (by surface area) and it contains 10% of the entire world’s remaining fresh water.

 

Tens of thousands of people live and fish and harvest wild rice and depend on the fresh water that is provided by the St Louis River estuary. If what happened to the permanently polluted river in Brazil a week ago happens to the proposed PolyMet tailings lagoon, those 12 towns and their people will be severely – and permanently – impacted. Some of the towns may be destroyed and unknown numbers of people will be drowned, injured or displaced.

 

As has been described many times in Duluth’s alternative news-weekly paper (the Duluth Reader but, significantly, NEVER by the Duluth News-Tribune earthen-walled tailings lagoon dams always leak but many of them totally collapse with devastating results. (Please study the photos below and be certain to click on the links to the 5 important videos below to fully understand why the PolyMet dam is so dangerous and cannot be allowed to be built.

 

Last week’s column carried a lot of text and so only there was only enough room for 4 photos,. and they were necessarily too small to be appropriately impactful. Therefore this week’s column will consist of less text and more images that should alarm even the most unenlightened pro-copper mining legislator, the co-opted DNR/PCA bureaucrats that have been granting PolyMet every permit they have asked for up until the Brazil catastrophe and every other copper mining advocate that has been intentionally deceived by PolyMet regarding the lethal dangers of soluble earthen wall dams that are supposed to – but can never - hold back toxic, highly acidic sulfide slurry for eternity. Disaster in some form or another is inevitable, and the river towns have not been warned.

 

Many environmentally-conscious folks here in Minnesota’s northland have been ashamed of our regional media outlets (especially the Duluth News-Tribune and the local media affiliates of CBS. NBC, ABC, PBS. NPR, MPR and WPR) as they have been black-listing the news of the recent disaster in Brazil’s mining country. Nobody that I know can think of any reportage of the 2014 copper mine disaster in British Columbia or the 2015 disaster in Brazil either.

 

The obviously intentional total lack of coverage of what happened to Brazil’s “PolyMet-style” earthen dam-walled tailings lagoons must at least be considered unethical and could even be considered criminal. One hopes that there will be some sort of explanation and apology in the future for their intentional lack of coverage. There surely are ulterior motives involved in the decisions to black-list what every other news outlet in the world has deemed urgently newsworthy.

 

These news outlets – if they have any honor at all - surely should be apologizing and asking for forgiveness from the dozen river towns that rely on those media outlets to keep them informed about lethal threats to their river (and our great lake!).

 

The five videos below are essential viewing!

 

  1. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eGaQ0vjHZE0

A 5 minute video of the 1-25-2019 Brazilian mine waste earthen dam disaster – the day after. Note a few of the surviving mine workers at 1:30; the destroyed high railroad bridge and torn RR tracks at 2 minutes; the doomed emaciated bull stuck in the mud at 3 minutes; the totaled mining company structures at 4 minutes; the CAT stuck in the mud at 4:20; the crumpled boxcars and destroyed train tracks at 5 minutes; and the partially-emptied tailings lagoon at the end.

 

< >https:/www.youtube.com/watch?v=a0qf5AuF3gwhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k0PWRiEWMTYhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E3oGMJHvtaMhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a0qf5AuF3gwhttps://countercurrents.org/2018/04/25/a-sampling-of-16-earthen-dam-failures/http://freepress.org/article/british-colombia%E2%80%99s-mount-polley-copper-mining-disaster-2014-northern-minnesota%E2%80%99s-equallyhttp://freepress.org/article/rio-tinto-still-polluting-after-all-these-yearsThe search goes on to recover the dozens of bodies still buried in the mineral-laced mud following the collapse of a dam in Braz

 

Futilely digging and searching for the missing bodies of mine employees and others buried in the sludge after the earthen tailings dam dissolved and destroyed everything downstream. This shows what was once a relatively narrow river.



Related image

 

Fish cannot survive such catastrophes, especially if highly toxic mine waste is involved

 

Image result for Começou a morte do Rio Paraopeba.

 

More casualties of the breach

 

Image result for Começou a morte do Rio Paraopeba.

 

More dead fish – died of asphyxiation. Any fish that managed to survive will be inedible due to ingested poison

 

https://cdn.winknews.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/BrazilianDamcollapse2019.jpeg

 

Farm animals didn’t fare well either. This animal survived but is still doomed.

 

 Gladyston Rodrigues/EM/D.A Press)

 

Exhausted rescue workers

 

 Alexandre Guzanshe/EM/D.A Press)

 

Rescue workers futilely searching for bodies buried in the soon-to-harden sludge. Note the worker to the left unable to excape from his waist-deep predicament

 

https://www.thenational.ae/image/policy:1.818302:1548506417/image/2019-01-25T211623Z_1957238983_RC133DF9FB80_RTRMADP_3_BRAZIL-VALE-SA-DISASTER.JPG?$p=bb823ac&w=1136&$w=ec52ab9

 

An overview of the massive partially emptied-out tailings lagoon (upper left). Note the slightly smaller, still-intact, water/sludge-filled tailings lagoon (lower left). The downstream devastation is represented in of the photo

 

    Aerial view over mud and waste from the disaster caused

 

What’s left of the upper section of the massive tailings lagoon after it liquified and collapsed

 

Mud and waste cover a road after a dam spill in Brumadinho, Minas Gerais, Brazil on Jan. 26, 2019. At least nine people have died and 300 are missing after a tailings dam burst at the Feijao mine in southeastern Brazil owned by Vale, the world's largest iron-ore producer, the Minas Gerais state government said. The dam in Brumadinho near Belo Horizonte broke on January 25 at around mid-day, unleashing a river of sludge that destroyed some nearby houses.

  

Toxic sludge overflowing a highway farther downstream. Note the damaged farm field (lower right)

 

The tailings dam, owned by Brazilian mining giant Vale, broke apart "very violently, very suddenly," sending a massive torrent of mud over the complex where 300 mine employees were working (AFP / Douglas Magno/  MANILA BULLETIN)

 

What’s left of the Vale mining company’s administrative buildings, its processing plant and assorted missing company structures, including the cafeteria and the barracks where hundreds of miners were once housed

 

 

    People from the community of Parque da Cachoeira look at debris in the mud-hit area a day after the collapse of a dam at an iron-ore mine belonging to Brazil's giant mining company Vale near the town of Brumadinho in the state of Minas Gerias in southeastern Brazil, on Jan. 26, 2019.

 

Destroyed downstream home

 

 

A sludge-demolished river-town home lies in ruins after the dam failure

 

An aerial view shows a destroyed vehicle after a dam collapsed in Brumadinho, Brazil, Saturday, Jan. 26, 2019. Rescuers searched for survivors in a huge area in southeastern Brazil buried by mud from the collapse of dam holding back mine waste, with several people dead and hundreds missing.

     

Doomed vehicle soon to be entrapped when the toxic sludge dries into a brick-like consistency

 Darcy Brum walks past mud that entered in the kitchen of the house of his father-in-law near Brumadinho, Brazil, Saturday, Jan. 26, 2019. The dam that held back mining waste collapsed, inundating a nearby community in reddish-brown sludge, killing several people and leaving scores of others missing.

 

The kitchen of a river town home. The water is poisonous.

mine collapse

 

Downstream from the tailings dam. Note the tributary to the right that flows into the main river was heavily contaminated when the flow reversed.

 

 Personal archive

 

The open pit mine at Brumadinho, Brazil as it appeared in 2008. The waste generated at this mine was stored in nearby tailings lagoons, two of which burst on Jan 25, 2019 after 4 years of dormancy.

 

An aerial view of the Rio Doce where it reaches the Atlantic ocean

 

The mine waste-contaminated Atlantic Ocean (poisoned by mercur, arsenic, etc) at the mouth of Brazil’s Rio Doce, once a healthy fishery, as it entered the Atlantic Ocean days after the breach. The river and the ocean area both remain polluted after 3 years. (This is what could happen to the St Louis River and Lake Superior if the proposed PolyMet tailings lagoon collapsed for any reason (including heavy rain deluge, over-topping, liquification, earthquake or quiver, etc.)

 

https://www.canadianmanufacturing.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/Mount_Polley_Mine_dam_befor.jpg?x96558

 

Before and after satellite photos of the Mount Polley copper mine area 2014. Note that in the lower photo the tailings lagoon is empty, the 6 foot wide Hazeltine Creek is visible from space, the freshly-poisoned Polley Lake is no longer dark blue and there is floating debris in Quesnel Lake that is visible from space!

 

https://imgs.mongabay.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/20/2017/12/19110325/2-mine1.jpg

 

Aerial view of the 100 foot-tall earthen dam-wall of the Mount Polley gold and copper mine tailings lagoon after it dissolved in 2014 and spewed highly toxic sludge into Lake Quesnel, a world-famous salmon and trout fishery. The narrow, tree-lined Hazeltine Creek that emptied into the lake was 6 feet wide at its widest prior to the catastrophe (which was the worst environmental disaster in the history of British Columbia) Thousands of downstream trees were up-rooted and wound up in the lake, which empties into the Fraser River and ultimately into the Pacific Ocean. PolyMet’s tailings dam is projected to reach 250 feet in height.

 

https://imgs.mongabay.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/20/2017/12/19112337/3-mine1.jpg

 

A photo taken 18 years after a 1974 tailings dam ruptured in Australia. Any humans or animals that are buried in such disasters can never be expected to be recovered in the dried, brick-like residue.