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2017-03-20_PERMIT FILE - C1981019A
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2017-03-20_PERMIT FILE - C1981019A
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Last modified
8/18/2017 10:28:31 AM
Creation date
8/15/2017 8:30:24 AM
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Template:
DRMS Permit Index
Permit No
C1981019A
IBM Index Class Name
Permit File
Doc Date
3/20/2017
Doc Name
Permits
Section_Exhibit Name
Volume 15 Rule 2
Media Type
D
Archive
Yes
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RULE 2 PERMITS <br />consisting predominantly of a calcareous lower phase and an upper phase that contains a few thin bedded, <br />tan, silty fine-grained sandstone layers within massive sandy shale. The deposition of the Mancos Shale <br />occurred in quiet offshore conditions when the western interior of the North American continent was <br />inundated by an epeiric seaway during the late Cretaceous. The Mancos Shale is generally more than <br />3,000 feet below ground surface in the Collom permit expansion area and is about 1,700 feet below the <br />base of projected mining. <br />Mesaverde Group - The Mesaverde Group generally consists of interbedded sandstones, mudstones and <br />siltstones of varying thicknesses. These beds were deposited in predominantly a near -shore terrestrial <br />environment, with the sedimentation influenced by sea -level changes, indicated by the presence of both <br />marine and non -marine rocks. The group consists of the Iles and the Williams Fork Formations and <br />overlies the Mancos Shale. Carbonaceous rocks are present in both formations; however, in the area of <br />the Colowyo Mine, thick coal beds are found only in the Williams Fork Formation. <br />Iles Formation - The Iles Formation conformably overlies the Mancos Shale. It is exposed on the edges <br />of the Axial Basin and south and west of the Colowyo revised permit area in the Wilson Dome area. It <br />has a thickness of approximately 1,500 feet. It is composed of littoral sands deposited along a <br />regressional ocean margin. <br />The Iles is generally comprised of light brown- to white, fine- to medium -grained, poorly sorted <br />calcareous sandstone interbedded with red and dark maroon sandy and silty carbonaceous shale. Thin <br />lenticular coal beds are found in the formation. A thick sandstone at the top of the Iles Formation, the <br />Trout Creek Sandstone Member, is a reliable marker horizon for drill holes in the Danforth Hills and <br />surrounding areas. <br />The Trout Creek Sandstone is light-colored, fine-grained, well -sorted, massive sandstone that was <br />deposited in a marginal -marine or littoral environment. The thickness of the Trout Creek Sandstone <br />varies across the area but is generally 60 to 80 feet. The deposition of the Trout Creek Sandstone marked <br />a major regression of the Late Cretaceous seaway in this region. The resulting clean blanket sand formed <br />by this migrating beach and barrier island complex is an aquifer of regional extent in northwestern <br />Colorado. The Trout Creek Sandstone Member, a common ridge -forming unit in the Danforth Hills, has <br />been called the "White Rock" because of its characteristic white sandstone exposures. <br />The Trout Creek sandstone underlies the lowest surface recoverable seam to being mined at Collom (the <br />Gb seams) by approximately 460 feet, based on exploration drill hole data obtained from exploraty <br />drilling in the Collom area <br />Williams Fork Formation - The Williams Fork Formation is the predominant coal -bearing unit in the <br />Colowyo revised permit area. The formation conformably overlies the Iles Formation. The Williams <br />Fork consists of a typical lagoonal sequence of interbedded tan to light gray sandstones, light gray to gray <br />siltstones, sandy, silty, or carbonaceous gray mudstones and coals. This sedimentary sequence is an <br />example of cyclothems deposited along a linear clastic shoreline located at the edge of an epicontinental <br />seaway. The formation ranges from beach sands grading into lowermost deltaic sediments deposited by <br />sluggish brackish water at the base, to middle and upper deltaic deposits deposited in a bayou setting in <br />the upper portions of the formation. This sequence was formed as the shore transgressed seaward, <br />resulting in the gradation from marine sediments below the formation to terrestrial sediments above the <br />formation. Coarse-grained sediments in the proposed Collom mining area are typified by channel and <br />bay -fill sandstones. These are of limited extent and laterally discontinuous. <br />Collom — Rule 2, Page 13 Revision Date: 12/11/15 <br />Revision No.: PR -04 <br />
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