Reflections In Black Water
On the morning of February 26, 1972, a coal refuse dam on the Middle Fork of Buffalo Creek collapsed, sending millions of gallons of black water into the communities that lined the creek downstream. Three hours later, 125 people were dead, more than 1,000 injured and 4,000 homeless. In this 51st Anniversary re-release, now available in 4K video with additional material, we reflect with some of the survivors of the tragedy - how it changed their lives and how the legacy of Buffalo Creek continues to impact environmental policy today.

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Buffalo Creek 1972: The Mine Dam That Was Damned From The Start

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Historic Disaster: 10 Years after the Kingston coal ash spill

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How Men Dug the Comstock Lode 1,000 Feet Underground Without Electricity

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Nuclear Historian Reacts to Movies | Science vs Fiction

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Britain Sold Palestine to Pay Its WWI Debt. The Balfour Declaration Was a Banking Deal!

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NORAD: How Was America's Underground Military Fortress Constructed? | Super Structures | Progress

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The Hard Life of Working in a Coal Mine

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Hard Coal: Last Of The Bootleg Miners

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If This Dam Fails, It Pollutes Half of Europe.

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10 Massive Dam Failures Caught On Camera

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Coal Rush (FULL MOVIE) | 2012 | Documentary, Coal, Environment, Polluted Water

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The Buffalo Creek Flood: An Act of Man

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Sludge

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Buffalo Creek Revisited

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The Terrifying Story Of The Mothman Of Point Pleasant | Boogeymen | Real History

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The Law Works Special - The Upper Big Branch Coal Mine Investigation

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Buffalo Creek Disaster

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China’s Secret | The Most Unbelievable Megaprojects in China | 4K Travel Documentary

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Black Wall of Death-The Buffalo Creek Disaster-Locations-Man West Virginia

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