Case Study of the Gold King Mine Spill

The Gold King Mine spill happened on August 5, 2015 near Silverton, Colorado when the abandoned mine was damaged during maintenance. This single, holistic exploratory case study uses document review and analysis to answer the research questions of what happened at Gold King Mine, how and why it happ...

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Main Author: Black, Erica Elizabeth
Format: Others
Published: North Dakota State University 2018
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10365/28719
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spelling ndltd-ndsu.edu-oai-library.ndsu.edu-10365-287192021-09-28T17:11:16Z Case Study of the Gold King Mine Spill Black, Erica Elizabeth The Gold King Mine spill happened on August 5, 2015 near Silverton, Colorado when the abandoned mine was damaged during maintenance. This single, holistic exploratory case study uses document review and analysis to answer the research questions of what happened at Gold King Mine, how and why it happened, what was the response, and what are the implications of this event. The findings indicate that the Environmental Protection Agency’s negligence, Colorado’s lack of regulations on abandoned mines, and the town of Silverton’s hesitance to be declared a Superfund site all contributed to the water contamination which negatively impacted the Navajo Nation. The research suggests this is another historic event that will further erode trust and relationships between the United States government and indigenous people. This work also creates a literature review of emergency management in the context of Native American communities. 2018-07-26T20:02:07Z 2018-07-26T20:02:07Z 2018 text/thesis https://hdl.handle.net/10365/28719 NDSU Policy 190.6.2 https://www.ndsu.edu/fileadmin/policy/190.pdf application/pdf North Dakota State University
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format Others
sources NDLTD
description The Gold King Mine spill happened on August 5, 2015 near Silverton, Colorado when the abandoned mine was damaged during maintenance. This single, holistic exploratory case study uses document review and analysis to answer the research questions of what happened at Gold King Mine, how and why it happened, what was the response, and what are the implications of this event. The findings indicate that the Environmental Protection Agency’s negligence, Colorado’s lack of regulations on abandoned mines, and the town of Silverton’s hesitance to be declared a Superfund site all contributed to the water contamination which negatively impacted the Navajo Nation. The research suggests this is another historic event that will further erode trust and relationships between the United States government and indigenous people. This work also creates a literature review of emergency management in the context of Native American communities.
author Black, Erica Elizabeth
spellingShingle Black, Erica Elizabeth
Case Study of the Gold King Mine Spill
author_facet Black, Erica Elizabeth
author_sort Black, Erica Elizabeth
title Case Study of the Gold King Mine Spill
title_short Case Study of the Gold King Mine Spill
title_full Case Study of the Gold King Mine Spill
title_fullStr Case Study of the Gold King Mine Spill
title_full_unstemmed Case Study of the Gold King Mine Spill
title_sort case study of the gold king mine spill
publisher North Dakota State University
publishDate 2018
url https://hdl.handle.net/10365/28719
work_keys_str_mv AT blackericaelizabeth casestudyofthegoldkingminespill
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