http://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/122-A44/
On a low, windswept rise at the
southeastern edge of the Navajo Nation, Jackie Bell-Jefferson prepares
to move her family from their home for a temporary stay that could last
up to seven years. A mound of uranium-laden waste the size of several
football fields, covered with a thin veneer of gravel, dominates the
view from her front door. After many years of living next to the
contamination and a litany of health problems she believes it caused,
Bell-Jefferson and several other local families will have to vacate
their homes for a third round of cleanup efforts by the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
Decades of uranium mining have dotted the landscape across the Navajo
Nation with piles of contaminated mine waste. The EPA has mapped 521
abandoned uranium mines on the reservation, ranging from small holes dug
by a single prospector into the side of a mesa to large commercial
mining operations.1 The Navajo people did not have a word for “radioactivity” when mining outfits looking for vanadium2 and uranium3
began moving onto their land in the 1940s, and they did not understand
that radiation could be dangerous. They were not told that the men who
worked in the mines were breathing carcinogenic radon gas and showering
in radioactive water, nor that the women washing their husbands’ work
clothes could spread radionuclides to the rest of the family’s laundry.
Bell-Jefferson and her brother Peterson Bell played in and around the
mines, splashing and swimming in pools of radioactive water that had
been pumped out of the mines and then collected on their property. The
contaminated water looked and tasted perfectly clean. Families used it
for cooking, drinking, and cleaning. Hogans and corrals were built with mine wastes, as were roads.
All that changed on 16 July 1979. Just about a mile and a half from
Bell-Jefferson’s home, a dam broke at the United Nuclear Corporation
mill, where workers processed ore from the nearby Northeast Church Rock
uranium mine. The spill dumped 94 million gallons of mill process
effluent and 1,100 tons of tailings—an acidic, radioactive sludge—into a
large arroyo that emptied into the Puerco River.4
The Church Rock spill occurred less than four months after the
partial meltdown of the Three Mile Island nuclear reactor, and it
released three times as much radiation, making it the biggest nuclear
spill in U.S. history, yet it received only a tiny fraction of the news
coverage.5
Declared a Superfund site in 1983, the heaps of waste around the mill
still cause radiation survey instruments to squeal from the invisible
uranium atoms that remain active 30 years later.6
READ MORE: http://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/122-A44/
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