Uranium Exposure on the Navajo Nation

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Introduction

The Navajo Nations geology makes it one of the riches deposit sites for uranium and other nonrenewable resources. Uranium is a naturally occurring element in trace amounts in the earth’s crust and has been used for many different purposes. In the last century the uranium ore was used extensively by the federal government for atomic energy defenses. Uranium mine operators removed nearly four million tons of ore from 1944 to 1986 resulting in 520 abandoned uranium mines on the Navajo Nation (Maldonado 2005). Many Navajo uranium miners report that they were never told the hazards of mining uranium, and were not given any protective equipment or proper ventilations in mines. In most cases miners used pick axes and shovels to remove uranium ore. At one point there were approximately over 1000 mines on the reservation. In the early days of mining on the reservation Navajo miners were paid minimum wage or less. Many miners in 1940s were paid less than a dollar there jobs included blasters, building wooden supports in the mines, diggers, transporters, and millers. Exposing these workers to unsafe and unsanitary conditions, many times they had their entire families with them in the mining camps. By the late 1930’s there was a strong correlations between uranium mining and high rates of lung cancer among uranium miners. Uranium tailing piles are a legacy of an “out of sight out of mind” mentality of the last century. Many of these tailing sites were left exposed to precipitation and wind carrying uranium far from the original sites.
In 1979, near Churchrock, New Mexico, 1000 tons of radioactive mill waste and 93 million gallons of acidic, radioactive solution was released into the Rio Puerco when the catchment...

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