My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
1994-06-01_GENERAL DOCUMENTS - C1981008
DRMS
>
Day Forward
>
General Documents
>
Coal
>
C1981008
>
1994-06-01_GENERAL DOCUMENTS - C1981008
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
2/3/2021 12:49:29 PM
Creation date
9/14/2015 9:23:27 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
DRMS Permit Index
Permit No
C1981008
IBM Index Class Name
General Documents
Doc Date
6/1/1994
Doc Name
PROPOSED DECISION AND FINDINGS OF COMPLIANCE (PR3)
Permit Index Doc Type
Findings
Media Type
D
Archive
No
Tags
DRMS Re-OCR
Description:
Signifies Re-OCR Process Performed
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
24
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
Climate <br /> The regional climate of the New Horizon area is typical of intermountain regions. It is <br /> characterized by cold winters, hot summers, low rainfall, and short growing seasons. The <br /> mine receives approximately 12 inches of precipitation in an average year. The majority of <br /> the precipitation falls between October and May. <br /> Regional Geology <br /> The New Horizon Mines are located near the axis of the Nucla Syncline (San Miguel <br /> Syncline), a shallow, broad synclinal fold running northwesterly for 65 miles. No evidence <br /> of faults has been observed in drill holes at New Horizon Mine 2 or at the New Horizon <br /> Mine 1 area. The Nucla Syncline is 10 to 15 miles southwest of the major regional geologic <br /> feature of the area, the Uncompahgre uplift. The region lies in the Dolores River basin. <br /> The mines are located two to four miles northeast of the San Miguel River. Gently rolling <br /> terrain traverses the area and the mines occupy a predominantly southwestern exposure. <br /> The mines are located in the Nucla-Naturita coal field. The coal is found in late Cretaceous <br /> sediments. The youngest Cretaceous rocks in the area consist of Mancos shale, a dark grey <br /> marine shale, present only on isolated hilltops south of the town of Nucla. Two hundred feet <br /> of Dakota sandstone outcrops extensively along the axis of the Nucla syncline. This <br /> formation consists of a yellowish-gray, fissile sandstone and conglomeratic sandstone <br /> interbedded with dark grey shale and coal. There are two coal seams within 100 feet of the <br /> base of the Dakota (Figure 2). The lower Cretaceous unit in the area, the Burro Canyon <br /> Formation, is separated from the Dakota by an unconformity. The Burro Canyon is <br /> comprised of white, grey and light brown sandstones and conglomerates interbedded with <br /> green and purplish shales, siltstones, mudstones and thin beds of limestone. This formation <br /> has a maximum thickness of 200 feet and outcrops on rims of canyons west and northwest of <br /> the mine. This formation is difficult to differentiate from the Dakota in this area and is <br /> commonly considered hydrogeologically similar. The Jurassic Morrison Formation is <br /> composed of 250 feet to 600 feet of varicolored siltstones and mudstones with beds of <br /> limestone and sandstone. <br /> The New Horizon Mine 1 produced coal from both the upper and lower Dakota coal seams. <br /> The upper Dakota coal seam ranges in thickness from 1.6 feet to 3.3 feet and is separated <br /> from the lower Dakota seam by 7 to 11 feet of interbedded sandstone and shale. The lower <br /> Dakota seam varies in thickness from 5.9 feet to 7.9 feet. The base of the lower Dakota <br /> coal is 83 feet above the top of the Burro Canyon Formation. The coal dips 10 to 20 <br /> southwest and strikes N 25°W to N 45' W. <br /> The New Horizon Mine 2 will primarily produce coal from the lower Dakota coal seam and <br /> may utilize the upper Dakota coal seam during subsequent permit terms if the seam is thick <br /> enough and of sufficient quality. The lower Dakota coal seam at New Horizon Mine 2 <br /> ranges in thickness from 4.2 feet to 6.9 feet and is 99 feet above the top of the Burro <br /> Canyon Formation. The coal dips 4.5° SW along a strike of N 45°W. <br /> 4 <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.