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Combie Reservoir sediment and mercury removal project team members receive award

ASCE President Michael Konieczki (third from left) congratulates Project Team Members (left to right): Sierra Fund?s Elizabeth ?Izzy? Martin; NV5 Global?s Jason Muir; NID?s Greg Jones (holding plaque) NID?s Gary King and Tino Maestas. Photo: nidwater.com

Posted on May 2, 2019

Nevada Irrigation District’s Combie Reservoir Sediment and Mercury Removal Project team members were winners of the 2018 Small Project of the Year award, presented by the American Society of Civil Engineers, Sacramento Section, according to a release.

The goal of the three-year pilot project is to remove sediment from Combie Reservoir while introducing an innovative mercury recovery process. Benefits include restoring water storage capacity in an existing surface water reservoir, removing mercury from the Bear River watershed, and creating long-term benefits to downstream aquatic habitat.

From Oct. 1 to Nov. 19 of last year, about 40,000 cubic yards of sediment were removed from the dry Combie Reservoir lakebed using an excavator/front loader. The next phase — which will continue through August of this year — will focus on removing sediment in wet conditions using a suction dredge. Once the material is out of the reservoir, a centrifuge technology will be used to remove elemental mercury.

Mercury was introduced to the Sierra Nevada during the Gold Rush period of the 1800s and used to process mining ore for gold. That mercury has remained and led to contamination of sediments throughout Sierra watersheds.

Findings from this project will become valuable to state regulators and help water managers address mercury in the aquatic food chain. When complete, this project can act as a replicate process, applied at other impacted reservoirs.

The American Society of Civil Engineers honored the Combie project and others during its annual awards banquet, held April 24 in Sacramento.

Source: theunion.com

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