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新墨西哥州西北部“格兰特铀矿区”的起源故事:地质区域形成过程中的档案、回忆录与勘探钻孔

Origin Stories of the 'Grants Uranium District' in Northwestern New Mexico: Archives, Memoirs, and Exploratory Boreholes in the Production of Geological Regions.

作者信息

DE Pree Thomas

机构信息

UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO UNITED STATES.

出版信息

Engag Sci Technol Soc. 2024;10(3):37-64. doi: 10.17351/ests2023.2323. Epub 2025 Mar 7.

Abstract

The "Grants uranium district" of northwestern New Mexico yielded more uranium ore than any other mining district in the United States during the Cold War Period (1947-1989). After the national market for uranium collapsed in 1979, the mines were slowly abandoned and the mills were decommissioned. More than ninety-eight percent of what was mined remains on site as toxic mine wastes, overburden, and mill tailings-in a landscape fractured by underground mine workings, punctured by exploratory boreholes, and saturated with the liquid waste discharged from the uranium mines and mills. Designated as a national "sacrifice zone," the former mining district constitutes egregious cases of environmental injustice and racism, as well as deeper impositions of settler colonialism. The former mining district overlaps multiple Native Nations and their broader ancestral homelands, as well as Nuevomexícano ("Hispano/Indo-Hispano") land grant allottees, and rural white ("Anglo") majority settler towns and communities. Returning to the origin stories of the mining district and the broader geological region, this article traces the epistemic production of the geophysical landscape by questioning the relationship between boreholes, geologic archives, and the memoir genre in geology. This style of historiography offers a critique of the historical background papers in geologic memoirs as one way of reading against the archival grain, and exposing the physical and material impacts of dispossession resulting from mineral exploration. Situated within anthropological traditions of science and technology studies and critical studies of settler colonialism, this article aims to contribute to emerging scholarship in "geological anthropology" and "political geology."

摘要

新墨西哥州西北部的“格兰茨铀矿区”在冷战时期(1947年至1989年)产出的铀矿石比美国其他任何矿区都多。1979年全国铀市场崩溃后,矿井逐渐被废弃,工厂也停止了运营。所开采的矿石中超过98%仍留在原地,成为有毒的矿渣、表土和选矿尾矿——这片土地因地下采矿作业而支离破碎,布满了勘探钻孔,还被铀矿和选矿厂排放的废液所浸透。该 former mining district 被指定为国家“牺牲区”,构成了环境不公正和种族主义的恶劣案例,以及定居者殖民主义的更深层次影响。 former mining district 与多个原住民部落及其更广阔的祖传家园重叠,还与新墨西哥州(“西班牙裔/印欧裔西班牙人”)土地授予受让人以及农村白人(“盎格鲁”)占多数的定居城镇和社区重叠。回到矿区和更广阔地质区域的起源故事,本文通过质疑钻孔、地质档案和地质回忆录体裁之间的关系,追溯了地球物理景观的认知生产。这种史学风格对地质回忆录中的历史背景文件提出了批评,作为一种逆档案纹理阅读的方式,并揭示了矿产勘探导致的剥夺所带来的物理和物质影响。本文立足于科学技术研究的人类学传统和对定居者殖民主义的批判性研究,旨在为“地质人类学”和“政治地质学”领域的新兴学术研究做出贡献。

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