This reclamation is 10 years old and no soil was placed - these are going directly into waste rock. This is high elevation, so the trees grow slowly
This reclamation is 10 years old and no soil was placed - these are going directly into waste rock. This is high elevation, so the trees grow slowly
This area, as I mentioned, is high elevation in the Rockies; close to the tree line. They get maybe a 5 month growing season at best (June to end of Sept). Undistrubed soils are thin (30 cm profiles tops) and rocky.
In comparison, in good soils around here, I’d expect 10 year old trees to be 2-3 m tall; thus, given the challenging growing conditions and the complete lack of soil, I think this is pretty good. Should their reclamation prescription use not use soil? No. I say, if it’s there, use it. However, mines are almost always short on material due to their inherent changes in topography (which creates more surface area to reclaim) so I think in areas you’re short, this is viable and comparable, given that across the valley, on an undisturbed mountain the trees probably look similar at the same age.
Rough mounding is used for three reasons: