Variations in moisture content for a soil cover over a 10 year period
The Equity Silver mine is located in north-central British Columbia and is the site of a large, well-instrumented soil cover. The soil-cover site was designed to prevent the generation of acid rock drainage from the acid-generating waste rock disposed of at this site. The cover was designed to act as an oxygen barrier by maintaining a layer of saturated soil above the waste rock. The cover consists of a compacted till placed over the waste rock and covered with a non-compacted layer of the same material. Neutron probes and thermal conductivity sensors were used to monitor the moisture content of the cover soil over a 10 year period. Weather data at the site were also collected. A review of the data collected has shown that saturation was maintained in the lower, 0.5 m thick compacted layer of the cover, as per the original cover design. The upper cover layer (0.3 m of noncompacted till) was subject to seasonal variations in moisture content, with drying in the summer months and wetting in the fall and spring. Variations in the moisture of the upper layer correlated well with the weather data collected at the site. Spatial variations were noted in the water contents measured over the cover, but a nearly saturated lower layer appears to have been maintained throughout the area monitored.Key words: soil cover, neutron probes, moisture profile, mine waste covers.