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Basic Materials Industries - History, United States History - Western, Plains & Rocky Mountain Region, Environmental Engineering, Ecology & Environmental Sciences, Environmental Conservation & Protection, Environmental Engineering
Wounding the West: Montana, Mining, and the Environment by David Stiller — book cover

Wounding the West: Montana, Mining, and the Environment

by David Stiller
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Overview

Federal policy toward hardrock mining remains largely unchanged since the passage of the General Mining Law of 1872. That legislation was originally intended to promote settlement and economic development of the American West. A century and a quarter later, the region no longer requires congressional coddling, yet more than half a million mines and mill sites remain abandoned throughout the western states. These sites have created 180,000 acres of polluted lakes and reservoirs and 12,000 miles of contaminated streams and rivers. Montana’s Blackfoot River, made famous by Norman Maclean’s A River Runs through It, is one such battered body of water. Not only did the 1872 law essentially give the land and minerals to miners and mining companies—and it continues to do so today—the law also required no mine reclamation or water quality protection. State mining laws likewise required little or no reclamation.

Wounding the West traces the role of hardrock mining and its relationship with the American West by following the environmental history of one Montana mine, the Mike Horse, from its 1898 discovery, through its heyday in the 1940s, subsequent abandonment, and eventual cleanup under the coercion of a state law that many would consider ill-suited for abandoned mines. David Stiller argues that taxpayers should treat mining companies like the for-profit enterprises they are and insist that the hardrock mining industry pay a fair royalty for extracted minerals and then put this funding to work correcting the industry’s worst historical abuses.

About the Author, David Stiller

David Stiller is a former hydrologist and environmental consultant. He lives and writes near Niwot, Colorado.

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Editorials

Choice

"The author, a hydrologist and environmental consultant with long-standing outdoor experience in the locality, writes in an effective personal style, with recollective descriptions of terrain, streams, nature, and the people who provide an anecdotal human thread"—Choice

Choice

"The author, a hydrologist and environmental consultant with long-standing outdoor experience in the locality, writes in an effective personal style, with recollective descriptions of terrain, streams, nature, and the people who provide an anecdotal human thread"—Choice

Booknews

An environmental history of the Mike Horse hardrock mine from its 1898 discovery, through its heyday in the 1940s, subsequent abandonment, and its eventual cleanup. The mine is presented as the epitome of the unchecked abuses of the mining industry in the United States and an argument for the urgent reform, if not outright repeal, of the General Mining Law of 1872, which allows for such abuses. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Book Details

Published
July 1, 2000
Publisher
University of Nebraska Press
Pages
212
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780803242814

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