EPA: Mushroom compost removes pollutants from Tar Creek site

The Associated Press and Tulsa World - March 23, 2019 12:50 pm

(Information from: Tulsa World, http://www.tulsaworld.com)
TULSA, Okla. (AP) – An Environmental Protection Agency report shows that mushroom compost has been extracting contaminants from the heavily polluted Tar Creek Superfund Site in northeastern Oklahoma for a decade.
Tar Creek is a 40-square-mile (103-square-kilometer) former mine and one of the nation’s oldest, most complex Superfund sites. Superfund is a law that funds and authorizes EPA cleanup of contaminated sites.
The Tulsa World reports that the site in Ottawa County has a passive treatment system that uses layers of mushroom compost to remove and separate cadmium, lead, and zinc from the site’s tainted water.
The system is one of numerous initiatives named in the Superfund site’s strategic plan announced last week by the Environmental Protection Agency, with cooperation from the Quapaw Tribe and the Oklahoma Department of Environmental Quality.

Image: KFOR

 

Latest Stories

Area Forecast

Independence Day A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly after 4pm. Mostly sunny and...

Down By Downtown This Friday in Ponca City

Get ready for an unforgettable evening this Friday at DXDT (Down By Downtown), a FREE live...