Albuquerque Journal

Toxic waste

Research weighs effects on Native Americans

- BY RICK NATHANSON JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

Superfund research center at UNM to analyze mining effects on Native Americans

Researcher­s hope to measure the effects of mixed metals and uranium waste exposure on Native American population­s living near abandoned mines, and better understand how these toxic substances spread through the environmen­t.

That’s the objective of the newly created Superfund Research Center at the University of New Mexico, which is funded by $1.2 million a year for five years by the National Institute of Environmen­tal Health Sciences.

There are more than 4,000 abandoned uranium mines — some 500 on the Navajo Nation alone — and some 160,000 abandoned hard rock mines scattered throughout the West, and some 600,000 Native Americans live within about six miles of those sites, said center director Johnnye Lynn Lewis, a research professor in the UNM College of Pharmacy.

“When you mine, the waste contains a whole soup of metals. We routinely analyze between 20 and 30, though not all of them are at toxic levels. Typically, the focus is on less than half a dozen,” said Lewis, who spearheade­d the drive to create the

research center.

Among the metals are arsenic, cadmium, lead, manganese, copper and, of course, uranium, “which as a heavy metal is more toxic than its radioactiv­e properties,” she said.

In addition, the Environmen­tal Protection Agency estimates that 40 percent of the West’s surface water is contaminat­ed with uranium, and tribes rely more on surface water for drinking, irrigation and livestock watering than other population­s.

Researcher­s will look at three tribal communitie­s in the Southwest hardest hit by uranium mining: The Red Water Pond Road community near Gallup; the BlueGap/Tachee Chapter in northeaste­rn Arizona; and Laguna Pueblo, formerly home to the nation’s largest open pit uranium mine.

Where possible, they will design interventi­ons to stabilize the waste at the sites.

While there has already been research on how a single metal can affect human toxicity, there has been little research on the health effects of multiple metals, something that needs to be addressed because of the large numbers of Native Americans who have been exposed, Lewis said.

Among the health concerns resulting from toxic exposure are damage to a person’s DNA, damage to a person’s immunologi­cal system and damage to a person’s neurologic­al developmen­t, something already known from exposure to lead and mercury.

In addition, researcher­s are also hoping to develop an early warning system for days when environmen­tal factors may increase exposure, Lewis said. That may include, in part, determinin­g the size of the particles in which the metals are bound, how easily the particles are mobilized by the wind, and direction and moisture content of the wind with respect to the location of the waste sites.

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 ?? ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL ?? This retention pond next to the former site of a mill in Shiprock is among the types of sites that will be investigat­ed as part of research on toxic mine waste.
ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL This retention pond next to the former site of a mill in Shiprock is among the types of sites that will be investigat­ed as part of research on toxic mine waste.

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