THE ROAD TO YUCCA MOUNTAIN: A BRIEF HISTORY
In a parallel course of events, USGS Director V.E. McKelvey proposed in 1976 to DOE's predecessor that the Nevada Test Site be given high priority among possible repository sites because of its potentially favorable geology and hydrology, which already were well documented from USGS studies for nuclear-weapons tests. By 1982, the saturated zones at Yucca Mountain and at sites in Texas and Washington were all under consideration, but Yucca Mountain was problematic because of large fracture permeability and high temperature beneath the deep water table. However, it did have potential for a repository within its thick unsaturated zone (UZ), an environment proposed for HLW disposal by I.J. Winograd of USGS, who published papers on this concept in 1974 and 1981. In 1982, DOE concurred with a USGS advisory letter and redirected Yucca Mountain studies to the UZ. A detailed conceptual study of a repository in the Yucca Mountain UZ, USGS Circular 903 by E.H. Roseboom, quickly followed.
NRCs 10 CFR Part 60 technical criteria for a repository in the saturated zone was released in 1983. It stated that UZ criteria would be proposed. NRCs NUREG 1046 summarized the changes proposed by USGS and DOE. With many references to Circular 903, NRC released the final criteria in 1985. After the final amendment of the Nuclear Waste Policy Act in 1988 eliminated all other sites, the NRC established 10 CFR Part 63 specifically for the Yucca Mountain UZ.