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GC43L-2451 The Badger Project: Succession, Patterned Ground, and Restoration at a Mountain Mine
  • +7
  • Martha Apple,
  • Martha E Apple,
  • Keith E Moore,
  • Xiaobing Zhou,
  • Robert Pal,
  • Joel Graff,
  • Makena Tanko,
  • Joe Griffin,
  • Nicholas Rasschaert,
  • Abby Peltomaa
Martha Apple

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

Author Profile
Martha E Apple
Keith E Moore
Biological Sciences, Geological Engineering, and The Badger Mine Research Team 1, Montana Technological University, Montana Technological University
Xiaobing Zhou
Robert Pal
Biological Sciences, Geological Engineering, and The Badger Mine Research Team 1, Montana Technological University, Montana Technological University
Joel Graff
Biological Sciences, Geological Engineering, and The Badger Mine Research Team 1, Montana Technological University, Montana Technological University
Makena Tanko
Biological Sciences, Geological Engineering, and The Badger Mine Research Team 1, Montana Technological University, Montana Technological University
Joe Griffin
Biological Sciences, Geological Engineering, and The Badger Mine Research Team 1, Montana Technological University, Montana Technological University
Nicholas Rasschaert
Biological Sciences, Geological Engineering, and The Badger Mine Research Team 1, Montana Technological University, Montana Technological University
Abby Peltomaa

Abstract

Mountains are integral and important parts of the world that are sometimes mined for their metals and minerals. While lucrative, mines in mountainous regions have not always received proper environmental stewardship. Thus, some mining regions have suffered accordingly, which in turn influences watersheds and their biota. In Butte, Montana, historical mining practices wreaked havoc on the montane/subalpine landscape.
22 Dec 2023Submitted to ESS Open Archive
27 Dec 2023Published in ESS Open Archive