TY - CPAPER T1 - Modelling a pit lake district to plan for abstraction regime changes T2 - Mine Closure 2011: Sixth International Conference on Mine Closure AU - McCullough, CD AU - Müller, M AU - Eulitz, K AU - Lund, MA ED - Fourie, AB A2 - Fourie, AB ED - Tibbett, M A2 - Tibbett, M ED - Beersing, A A2 - Beersing, A DA - 2011/09/18 PY - 2011 PB - Australian Centre for Geomechanics PP - Perth CY - Perth C1 - Perth SP - 581 EP - 591 AB - Mining pit lakes can form in open cut mining pits that extend below the groundwater table. Final lake surface levels generally represent the greatest risk of pit lake closure to stakeholders through potential to overflow and discharge to regional surface water bodies and groundwater resources. An essential prerequisite for managing this risk is a good understanding of the lake’s water budget. Pit lakes in the Collie Coal Basin ,Western Australia form a lake district currently consisting of 13 lakes exceeding a total volume of 200 GL of acid and metalliferous (AMD) degraded water. Given long-term risks for off-site contamination, regulatory agencies often rely on geochemical predictions of future pit lake water quality to evaluate closure strategies that protect the surrounding environment. Using an existing regional groundwater model, we modelled representative pit lake types in the Collie Lake District, south-western Australia, to determine different regional groundwater abstraction regime effects on pit lake water levels. PITLAKQ was used to model three different lakes representing three distinct lake types identified by conceptual modelling: Historic (around 50 years old), New/Rehabilitated, and New/ Unrehabilitated (both around 5–15 years old). An accurate representation of the water level-volume relationships was developed before all available data on major hydrological sinks and sources such as groundwater inflow/outflow, surface water inflow/outflow, as well as precipitation and evaporation were considered in lake water budget calculations. Although we found large deviations between measured and calculated water levels we could show reasonable limits for groundwater inflows and outflows by examining different scenarios. Reciprocally, this improved the groundwater model(s) suggesting coupling fine-scale pit lake models with groundwater models to identify the data quality for sinks and sources as an approach for other pit lake models. Our modelling scenarios showed that planned groundwater abstraction regime changes would lead to only limited changes in lake water depth compared to modelling uncertainties resulting from limited available data and the use of a regional groundwater model. This example illustrates pit lake modelling with low data availability still allows useful scenario testing under different operational scenarios. UR - https://papers.acg.uwa.edu.au/p/1152_61B_McCullough/ ER - DO - 10.36487/ACG_rep/1152_61B_McCullough