Monte Kali: A Mountain of Table Salt

Sep 30, 2015 5 comments

Monte Kali is an unusual landmark in the small town of Heringer in eastern Hesse, Germany. It’s a spoil heap containing nothing but sodium chloride or common table salt, which is a byproduct of potash mining. For over a hundred years, potash mining has been a major industry in the region. It started with the opening of Wintershall potash works, which began mining in 1903, and today is the world’s biggest potash mine with an operational area about the size of Greater Munich’s.

Potash mining produces a mixture of potash and sodium chloride, with potassium content between 20% and 35%. Thus, for every ton of potash recovered, several tons of sodium chloride is produced. This is dumped at several sites around the region. The dumps contain up to 96% sodium chloride.

monte-kali-heringen-11

Photo credit

Monte Kali began growing in 1973, and it’s where the K+S chemical company dumps sodium chloride. The heap rises over 200 meters above the surrounding land, and as of January 2014, covered an area of 93 hectares. It contains as approximately 188 million tonnes of salt, with another 900 tonnes being added every hour and 6.4 million tonnes a year.

Lying next to the border with the state of Thuringia, Monte Kali towers over Heringen and is a popular attraction. Locals refer to it as “Kalimanjaro” — a play of words between Kali (shorthand for Kalisalz, German for "potash") and the famous volcanic peak Mount Kilimanjaro. More than 10,000 visitors climb the artificial mountain every year.

But Monte Kali and other spoil heaps in the region are environmentally destructive. An enormous amount of salt seeps into the ground polluting the soil, rivers and groundwater. The surrounding soil has become virtually barren and only a few halophyte plants resistant to salt can grow there. The Werra river too has become inhospitable to freshwater organisms.

monte-kali-heringen-6

Photo credit

monte-kali-heringen-14

Photo credit

monte-kali-heringen-8

Photo credit

monte-kali-heringen-1

Photo credit

monte-kali-heringen-2

Photo credit

monte-kali-heringen-3

Photo credit

monte-kali-heringen-4

Photo credit

monte-kali-heringen-5

Photo credit

monte-kali-heringen-22

Photo credit

monte-kali-heringen-21

Photo credit

monte-kali-heringen-12

Photo credit

monte-kali-heringen-15

Photo credit

monte-kali-heringen-10

Photo credit

Comments

  1. This mountain of salt is not consumption quality and thus, should not be referred to as table salt.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Why would you not package it as table salt and make more money whilst saving the environment?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Don't you think if it was profitable they'd be doing exactly that? Or are you so arrogant you assume that that only you have thought of the idea? Oh, right: "whilst saving the environment." The fact that you used that phrase means you have the economic acumen of an eight year-old.

      Delete
  3. This mountain of salt COULD be processed and refined as table salt but that would still leave a big part of the mountain to dispose of. It could also be used on icy roads as is.

    If they don't do something, there won't be any vegetation, or potable water, at some point. Since there are no fresh water fish they might could create a salt water fish farm in the river. The water is already polluted with salt downstream so fish crap wouldn't make it any worse.

    ReplyDelete
  4. It looks like lush farmland to me

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

More on Amusing Planet

{{posts[0].title}}

{{posts[0].date}} {{posts[0].commentsNum}} {{messages_comments}}

{{posts[1].title}}

{{posts[1].date}} {{posts[1].commentsNum}} {{messages_comments}}

{{posts[2].title}}

{{posts[2].date}} {{posts[2].commentsNum}} {{messages_comments}}

{{posts[3].title}}

{{posts[3].date}} {{posts[3].commentsNum}} {{messages_comments}}