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									<identifier>oai:www.peertechzpublications.org:10.17352/gje.000025</identifier>
									<datestamp>2020-10-23</datestamp>
									<setSpec>PTZ.GJE:VOL5</setSpec>
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										<dc:title>
										Tailing dumps of the tyrnyauz tungsten–molybdenum mining and processing complex: Current state and outlooks
										</dc:title><dc:creator>NS Bortnikov</dc:creator><dc:creator> AG Gurbanov</dc:creator><dc:creator>Alexander Y Dokuchaev</dc:creator><dc:description>&lt;p&gt;The Tyrnyauz W–Mo deposit was developed by opencast and underground mines until 2003. The assets of the Tyrnyauz Tungsten–Molybdenum Mining and Processing Complex (TTMC) include two tailing dumps: Tailing 2 (housed on the left-hand side of the Baksan River valley, 2 km south of the settlement of Bylym) and Supertailing 2 (a superdump housed in the valley of the Gizhgit River, a left-hand tributary of the Baksan River).&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;The height of the rock-filling dam of Supertailing 1 reaches 160 m. A pond on its top protects the ecosystems from the wind erosion of the dumped industrial wastes. The protecting pond is equipped with a tunnel drainage system, which is used to discharge excess water to the Baksan River, to a certain technological water level in the pond.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Shallow-focus earthquakes (with M = 5–7) and/or debris and mud flows are able to destroy the dam, and this will result in the transfer of toxic compounds to the Baksan River and water-bearing Quaternary alluvial rocks in the foredeep, where the river flows into the plain.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;The following soil contamination sources were identified: (1) Winds continuously blowing along the Baksan valley erode fines where the recultivation layer of Tailing 2 is disturbed and in the beach parts of Supertailing 1; the extent of this contamination varies from hundreds of meters to a few kilometers; (2) Massive blasting operations at the opencast mines before 2003 resulted in atmospheric emissions of dust clouds with ore minerals; this pollutions extends for dozens of kilometers (along the valleys of the Baksan River and its tributaries).&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;The most ecologically hazardous emissions are those of quartz dust and dust with heavy-metal minerals, including sulfides. A method for utilizing TTMC wastes was engineered and patented. The results provide a basis for designing measures aimed at decreasing the adverse load on the ecosystems in the Elbrus area, which is highly attractive to tourists.&lt;/p&gt;</dc:description>
										<dc:publisher>Global Journal of Ecology - Peertechz Publications</dc:publisher>
										<dc:date>2020-10-23</dc:date>
										<dc:type>Mini Review</dc:type>
										<dc:identifier>https://doi.org/10.17352/gje.000025</dc:identifier>
										<dc:language>en</dc:language>
										<dc:rights>Copyright © NS Bortnikov et al.</dc:rights>
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