1305 Lobo Pl, Albuquerque, NM, 87106, USA; 110 8th St, Troy, NY 12180, USA.
J Environ Manage. 2020 Aug 15;268:110601. doi: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2020.110601. Epub 2020 May 14.
During the second half of the twentieth century, northwestern New Mexico served as the primary production site for one of the world's largest nuclear arsenals. From 1948 to 1970 the "Grants uranium district" provided almost half of the total uranium ore accumulated by the United States federal government for the production of nuclear weapons, in addition to becoming a national source for commercial nuclear energy from the late 1960s to the early 1990s. By the twenty-first century, after a prolonged period of economic decline that began in the late 1970s, all uranium mining and milling in New Mexico had ceased, leaving a legacy of environmental health impacts. What was once referred to as "The Uranium Capital of the World" now encompasses over a thousand abandoned uranium mines and seven massive uranium mill tailings piles, which are associated with airborne and soil contamination as well as groundwater plumes of uranium and other contaminants of concern, in a landscape that has been fractured by underground mine workings and punctured by thousands of exploratory boreholes. This article presents an ethnographic study of the diverse forms of expertise involved in monitoring and managing the mine waste and mill tailings. Drawing from over two years of ethnographic research, I describe the relationship between different stakeholders from local communities, government agencies, and transnational mining corporations as they deliberate about the possibility of cleaning up the former mining district. My thesis is that the possibility of cleaning up the Grants district hinges on the "politics of baselining"-a term I introduce to describe the relationship between stakeholders and their competing environmental models and hydrogeological theories; each accounts for a different geological past prior to mining that can be deemed "natural," as the background against which to measure the anthropogenic impacts from mining.
在 20 世纪后半叶,新墨西哥州西北部是世界上最大的核武库之一的主要生产地。从 1948 年到 1970 年,“格兰特铀矿区”为美国联邦政府为生产核武器而积累的铀矿石总量提供了近一半,此外,从 20 世纪 60 年代末到 90 年代初,它还成为了商业核能的全国性来源。到 21 世纪,经过始于 20 世纪 70 年代末的长期经济衰退,新墨西哥州的所有铀矿开采和提炼都已停止,留下了环境健康影响的遗产。曾经被称为“世界铀都”的地方现在拥有超过 1000 个废弃的铀矿和 7 个大型铀矿尾矿堆,这些矿场与空气和土壤污染以及铀和其他受关注污染物的地下水羽流有关,在一个被地下采矿作业和数千个勘探钻孔刺穿的景观中。本文对监测和管理矿山废物和尾矿的各种专业知识进行了民族志研究。本文利用两年多的民族志研究,描述了当地社区、政府机构和跨国矿业公司等不同利益相关者之间的关系,他们在考虑清理前矿区的可能性。我的论点是,清理格兰特矿区的可能性取决于“基线政治”——我引入这个术语来描述利益相关者及其相互竞争的环境模型和水文地质理论之间的关系;每个模型都代表了采矿前的不同地质历史,可以被视为“自然”,作为衡量采矿的人为影响的背景。