In the Shadow of Sludge: The Legacy of Coal Waste In AppalachiaMain MenuIntroductionWhat Are Coal Impoundments?What are the risks?The History of Coal Impoundments in the U.S.Coal Impoundment MapNeighborhoods Near Coal ImpoundmentsCoal Impoundment ResourcesPierce Greenberg060cf3453f2e3b1b41150863f2d213578ccea2d4
The Buffalo Creek Flood
12017-05-18T15:05:09-07:00Pierce Greenberg060cf3453f2e3b1b41150863f2d213578ccea2d4183812A sample from the award-winning 1975 Appalshop film "The Buffalo Creek Flood: An Act of Man." On Feb. 26, 1972, a coal waste dam owned by the Pittston Company collapsed at the head of a crowded hollow in southern West Virginia. A wall of sludge, debris, and water tore through the valley below, leaving in its wake 125 dead and 4000 homeless. The Pittston Company, owners of the dam, denied any wrongdoing, maintaining that the disaster was 'an act of God'. Interviews with survivors, representatives of union and citizen's groups, and company officials are juxtaposed with actual footage of the flood and scenes of the ensuing devastation. A film by Mimi Pickering.plain2017-05-18T15:06:10-07:00Pierce Greenberg060cf3453f2e3b1b41150863f2d213578ccea2d4
This page is referenced by:
12017-05-18T15:03:37-07:00What are the risks?9plain2017-06-07T12:13:20-07:00Coal impoundments pose several risks to communities and the environment—the catastrophic risk of dam failure and the environmental risk of local water contamination.
First, there is the threat of an impoundment failure. Coal impoundment failures have caused some of the most devastating human and environmental disasters in U.S. history. The most prominent impoundment failure was the Buffalo Creek Disaster in 1972, which killed 125 people in southern West Virginia. The flood left more than 4,000 people without homes.
The second concern with coal waste impoundments is the ongoing threat of slurry leaking into local water sources. While several communities, such as Prenter, W.V., have long presumed that coal waste is impacting their drinking water, there is little definitive research on the subject. A review of 42 water wells in the Big Sandy region of Kentucky and West Virginia found that wells in watersheds near coal impoundments had increased levels of iron—potentially indicating a marker of coal waste contamination. However, scientists noted that it was difficult to separate markers of pollution from naturally occurring metals such as arsenic, manganese, and lead.