- 35,000 tourists a year
visit the Berkeley Pit.
A century ago this was called
the Richest Hill on Earth.
It was the Anaconda Copper Mine
in Butte, Montana.
It's not rich anymore, and
it's not much of a hill.
In the 1950s, the mine changed
from digging underground tunnels
that followed particularly
rich veins of copper,
to just excavating everything,
turning the hill into an open pit
on a scale that is difficult
to convey on camera.
There were whole neighbourhoods destroyed
to make way for this.
It is a mile wide, and so
deep that you could fit
the new One World Trade Center
standing upright in it.
Or at least you could,
if the pit wasn't halfway filled
with toxic dilute acid.
It kills any birds that
land in there for too long.
In 2016, thousands of geese
died in one night
after a snowstorm forced them down there.
The team here let me get a little bit
closer than the tourists do.
- Some studies were done
to try to figure out
how long a bird can withstand
sitting on the pit water
and those studies found
that it's up to 18 hours.
Six to seven thousand birds come through
and utilise the Berkeley Pit
as a resting stop per year.
We're on the overlap of two major flyways
so it's to be expected.
[deep boom]
- Can you tell me what that was?
- So that's a propane cannon,
we have them on timers
and they run 24 hours a
day, seven days a week.
Hopefully, deter the birds
from ever considering
landing on the water of the
Berkeley Pit to begin with.
If the birds land, we
have a crew of personnel
that observes from this shack on the hour.
They log them and then
attempt to haze them off.
The go-to is high-powered rifles,
you have that ability to hit very close
to the birds from a
very far distance away.
And it's not so much the boom
as you would expect that scares them
but it's the projectile hitting the water,
creating a large splash, and
that's what usually does it.
And in the case that we know
a large flock of birds is coming,
we can have continual fireworks
to deter the birds from
entering the pit area.
We get almost all of them,
we are over 99% effective.
- There's around 10,000 miles
of mine shafts and tunnels
under the city of Butte.
That's not an exaggeration.
10,000 miles.
Groundwater and rainwater had
to be constantly pumped out.
Nearby pumps moved somewhere
around 300 litres a second.
But when this pit shut down in 1982,
so did the pumps,
and water started to flood
the old tunnels and the pit.
The rock here is full of iron pyrite.
Combine that with oxygen and water
and as it rusts, you get sulfuric acid.
That in turn, breaks down other
metals and minerals in the rock.
And the result is that
the water down there
is so acidic and so
contaminated with toxins
that nothing except a few
hardy bugs can live in it.
The deep groundwater here
is utterly contaminated
but it's a closed system.
The sulfuric acid can't
get in or out, for now,
because there's one more catch.
Water is still flowing into the pit
and if it gets above a certain level,
then the nasty stuff
will start to leak out.
- So down here we're at the
Berkeley Pit pump station.
Right now the Berkeley Pit
is the sink or the sump,
like a hydraulic control for the system.
So what we're doing here
is we're pumping, treating
and discharging water from the system.
And this includes bringing
Berkeley Pit water on line
and treating it through an
existing water treatment plant.
If the Berkeley Pit is not maintained,
the protective water level would
be reached in July of 2023.
pH at one time was as
low as about 2.2 or 2.3.
Currently up to about 4.1.
The water that we'll be
discharging from the site
will be clean water, about
7 million gallons per day.
2100 gallons per minute.
Since 1982, the water
level has been increasing,
in the neighborhood of about
six to seven feet per year.
Later this year would be
the first time since 1982
that the pit water level will
be maintained and held steady.
- Tourists go here because, well,
tourists will go anywhere interesting
and this is interesting.
In 2007, Dr Phaedra Pezzullo of the
University of Colorado, Boulder,
coined the term 'toxic tourism'.
The fact that people will
come to gawp or be shocked
or just to take a selfie,
and say that they saw
the mile-wide pool of toxic waste.
And there are much worse ways
to raise awareness
and tell the world, hey,
this is pretty screwed up
and we need to do something about it.
A $3 admission fee is,
well, it's capitalism.
In the United States, a country that codified
the idea of the roadside attraction,
it almost seems normal to pay for a ticket
to see the mile-wide,
incredibly toxic pit.
Thanks to all the team
from Montana Resources
and the Berkeley Pit who
helped make this video happen.
You can find out more about them
by pulling down the description.
