68 dead fish found after contaminated water discharge from Yukon mine disaster site
WHITEHORSE — Yukon government officials say 68 dead fish have been found after an ore slide and discharge of cyanide contaminated water from the Eagle Gold mine site.
Cameron Sinclair, a Yukon government fisheries biologist, says the fish were discovered last week by the mine’s owner, Victoria Gold, and they’re believed to have died after a release from the mine’s water treatment plant.
Sinclair says the company stopped discharging treated water after finding the dead fish, and the federal Fisheries Department has now ordered the company to build a number of fish barriers to create a “no go zone for fish.”
Brendan Mulligan, a senior scientist with Yukon’s environment department, says there’s “clear evidence” of groundwater contamination, though samples with the highest concentrations of cyanide, up to 10,000 times above aquatic life guidelines, are being “contained on-site.”