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2018-01-23_GENERAL DOCUMENTS - C1981041
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2018-01-23_GENERAL DOCUMENTS - C1981041
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Last modified
1/23/2018 1:45:42 PM
Creation date
1/23/2018 1:44:19 PM
Metadata
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Template:
DRMS Permit Index
Permit No
C1981041
IBM Index Class Name
General Documents
Doc Date
1/23/2018
Doc Name Note
For RN7
Doc Name
Proposed Decision and Findings of Compliance
From
DRMS
To
Snowcap Coal Company, Inc
Permit Index Doc Type
Findings
Email Name
JHB
Media Type
D
Archive
No
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<br /> <br /> <br /> 11 C1981-041 RN7 findings <br />overlies the Cameo coal zone, behaves as a single hydrologic unit. <br /> <br />The water table in the permit area and adjacent area can be directly correlated to its elevation <br />relative to the Colorado River. Rock formations and alluvium below the level of the river are <br />gravity-fed and are saturated with water from the river. Due to the clastic differentiation and <br />lensing of sandstones and shales in the area together with the low permeability of the rock, the <br />strata above the zone of saturation act to confine the body of groundwater. Therefore, the water <br />table is located at approximately the same elevation as the Colorado River. <br /> <br />This fact is important in defining the hydrologic impact on the water-bearing strata by the mine <br />operation (see the Probable Hydrologic Consequences section of this document). There are four <br />primary water bearing zones that may be directly or indirectly affected by the mine operation: the <br />Colorado River alluvium, the undifferentiated sandstone lenses in the Mesaverde above the coal <br />seam, the Cameo coal seam, and the Rollins sandstone unit below the coal seam. <br /> <br />There are no aquifers in the permit or adjacent area that can store and transmit water of sufficient <br />quality or quantity for beneficial use. A September, 1997, study included in the permit application <br />package confirms that the Rollins Sandstone in the permit area does not meet the regulatory criteria <br />of an aquifer. Laboratory analyses have shown groundwater in the permit vicinity to be high in <br />salts and of poor quality. Therefore, no beneficial uses of groundwater exist in the permit or <br />adjacent area. No groundwater rights have been adjudicated on or adjacent to the permit area to <br />date. Only one groundwater well (an alluvial well) exists adjacent to the permit area; it is used for <br />stock watering. <br /> <br />Additional information on hydrology can be found in Tabs 7, 17 and 18, of the permit application <br />package. <br /> <br />Surface Water Hydrology <br /> <br />A general description of the surface water hydrology of the permit area is found in Volume 2, Tab <br />7 of the permit application. Maps displaying the general surface water hydrology are found in <br />Exhibits 1 and 17 of that document. Please see Section B.II of this document for a discussion of <br />the Probable Hydrologic Consequences (PHC) of the Roadside Portal Mines on surface water <br />quantity and quality and for a further discussion of the surface water monitoring plan. Alluvial <br />valley floors (AVF's) are discussed in Section B.XIII of this document. <br /> <br />The Colorado River is the only perennial stream in the permit area. On the west side of the river, <br />Coal Creek and Jerry Creek flow through the Roadside North Portal portion of the permit area <br />within deeply incised canyons draining approximately 12 and 70 square miles, respectively. Coal <br />Creek, an ephemeral drainage, passes through surface mine disturbance near the Roadside North <br />Portal where the channel has been diverted. Jerry Creek is an intermittent drainage located in the <br />extreme northern portion of the permit area. Flows in all of these drainages occur primarily during <br />spring snowmelt and in response to sudden, high intensity thunderstorms, the latter of which are <br />characterized by high peak discharges, short flow durations and high sediment loads. The <br />Roadside North Portal portion of the permit area has been removed from the permit via TR-70. <br />
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