Laserfiche WebLink
cross - bedded sandstone varying in thickness from 100 to 200 feet. It is isolated hydrologically from the underlying <br />Wadge Overburden sequence in the mine permit area by a very low permeability marine shale, which has a thickness <br />of up to 700 feet. Water levels in the Twentymile Sandstone have been monitored in the mine plan, as shown on <br />Figure 3 -a, Well Hydrograph, for Well 006- 82 -48A. Period of record water levels for the Twentymile Sandstone <br />monitoring wells are shown on Figures 3i, 3j, 3k, 3r and 3s. <br />Water quality from the 81 -30 and 006 -82 -48A wells completed in the Twentymile Sandstone aquifer indicate a <br />characteristic sodium bicarbonate type water with a total dissolved solids(TDS) concentration of about 300 mg/l, <br />and this is depicted graphically in Figure 4 -a, Ground water quality. Period of record water quality data for wells <br />FBR11B and FBR2, 97012TM and 97013TM completed in this unit, show that TDS varies from 450 mg/l to 540 <br />mg/1 for Well FBR 11 -B (which will be abandoned in 2003 due to subsidence damage), and 928 mg/l to 1,040 mg /l <br />for Well FBR -2, 480 mg/1 to 530 mg/l for 97012Tm, and 590 mg/1 to 960 mg/1 for Well 97013TM.. <br />Trout Creek Sandstone <br />The Trout Creek sandstone is the second major regional aquifer in the Twentymile Park Basin. The unit is light <br />brown to light gray, fine grained, massive sandstone, which varies in thickness from 50 to 400 feet. It has good <br />lateral continuity throughout the basin and moderate values of hydraulic conductivity. <br />Water levels in the 006- 83 -48C Well, completed in the Trout Creek Sandstone approximately 2,000 feet north of <br />the underground operations have been measured on approximately a quarterly basis since early 1984, until it was <br />abandoned in 1992. Water levels are plotted on Figure 3 -h. Water levels in this well tend to rise during the period <br />following spring snowmelt, which indicates that recharge to the aquifer occurs at this time. The water levels in the <br />well are several hundred feet above the top of the Trout Creek showing that the aquifer is confined and under <br />significant artesian pressure. Period of record water levels for the Trout Creek Sandstone monitoring wells are <br />shown in Figures 3m, 3n, 30, 3p, 3q, 3t and 3u. Well 95M00l (figure 3p) has also exhibited a decline since 1995. <br />This well was drilled to replace Well 006 -83 -48C after the well was undermined and subsided. Mining of the EMD <br />began in 1995, which is down -dip of this well and the operation may have contributed to the declining water levels <br />in this well. Well FBR -2 (Figure 3q) located along the eastern permit boundary, exhibited consistent water levels <br />until early 1999, and then dropped about 50 feet. Since that drop, consistent water level trends have been recorded <br />for the well. <br />Well 97012TC (Figure 3t) has exhibited a steady decline in water level since monitoring began in the 1998 water <br />year. As indicated below, the Trout Creek Sandstone is an isolated aquifer. The declines in water level do not <br />appear to be related to TC mining activities. <br />Well 001 -83 -107 (Figure 3u) has exhibited a steady decline in water level since the early 1990's. This well is <br />located down dip of the TC bathhouse water well (001 -83 -106, Figure 3m). Water level decline may be attributed <br />to TC's pumping of water from Well 001 -83 -106. <br />A sequence of low permeability siltstones, shales and coals, approximately 250 feet thick, separates the Trout Creek <br />Sandstone from the overlying Wadge Overburden sequence, which includes the Wadge coal seam. Recharge to the <br />Trout Creek sandstone occurs along its outcrop, approximately 1.5 miles south of the southern permit boundary, as <br />shown on the Trout Creek Sandstone Potentiometric Surface Map (Map 33). This is very little hydrologic <br />connection between the Trout Creek sandstone and the Wadge coal seam in the mining area. TC has mined in the <br />Western, Southwestern, and Eastern mining districts and this activity has not resulted in any significant detectable <br />inflows from the Trout Creek sandstone to the mine workings. <br />Water quality data from the 001 -83 -106 Well indicates that the Trout Creek sandstone baseline water quality is a <br />sodium bicarbonate type with moderate sulfate concentrations and very low concentrations of calcium and <br />magnesium as depicted graphically in Figure 4 -a, Ground Water Quality Data. TDS concentrations are in the order <br />of 900 mg/1. Period of record date for Well 001 -83 -106 shows a TDS concentration of 330 mg/1 to 960 mg /, Well <br />95M001 shows a range of 450 mg /l to 1010 mg /1, Well FBR 2 -E shows a range of 760 mg/l to 1010 mg /l, Well <br />97012TC shows a range of 810 mg /1 to 1030 mg /l, and Well 97013 TC shows a range of 703 mg /l to 810 mg/1. <br />TR13 -83 2.04 -20 11/03/14 <br />