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Subsidence Evaluation for the <br /> Exhibit 60E Southern Panels, Apache Rocks West, & Sunset Trail Mining Areas Page 20 <br /> Cracks that occur above the mined longwall panel area also tend to close, once longwall mining <br /> faces move out of the surface area of influence (DeGraff and Romesburg 1981). Any local bed <br /> separations during active subsidence between rocks of different strengths (Figure 2) will likely <br /> close once equilibrium conditions occur. However, any cracks present above rigid chain pillars, <br /> barrier pillars, or the outer limit of mined/unmined coal may remain open where permanent tensile <br /> stresses remain after mining is completed due to the convex curvature of the subsidence profile. <br /> During the past ten years of annual observations in the area of the West Elk Mine area by WWE, <br /> no cracks were observed above mined-out longwall panels in colluvium more than an estimated <br /> ten feet thick. No cracks have been observed in alluvium above mined-out longwall panels. No <br /> cracks were observed in the alluvium and colluvium of Sylvester Gulch and Deep Creek(estimated <br /> thickness range is 25 to 150 feet) during periodic field observations in the Apache Rocks and Box <br /> Canyon mining areas. The near-surface alluvial material consisted of primarily sand, silt, clay, <br /> and soil in the two areas mentioned, and was located above rigid pillars and panel boundaries <br /> where the overburden depth ranges from 800 to 1,050 feet. Longwall mining has already occurred <br /> in the E-seam under Dry Fork, where overburden thickness reaches a minimum of less than 400 <br /> feet. No cracks were observed in the alluvium of Dry Fork following longwall mining; therefore, <br /> no significant cracking in alluvial and colluvial deposits is anticipated with proposed mining in the <br /> Southern Panels mining area. The Sunset Trail mining area will include South Prong, where <br /> conditions are expected to mirror mining under Dry Fork,where alluvial and colluvial deposits are <br /> present. Reaches of South Prong underlain by bedrock will be more prone to surface cracking, <br /> with projected depths of 5 to 15 feet. <br /> The probable reason for the lack of cracking in alluvial and colluvial deposits is that the fine sand- <br /> to clay-sized material and overlying soil can yield without cracking or bulging as it deforms as a <br /> discrete unit or units during the subsidence process. The alluvium in the Southern Panels and <br /> Sunset Trail mining areas is estimated to vary in thickness from about 25 feet to 75 feet. This <br /> same reasoning also applies to the colluvium in the area. Although subsidence cracks were locally <br /> observed in colluvium less than a foot to a few feet thick, no cracks were observed in colluvium <br /> more than about 10 feet thick. <br /> 5.4 Angle of Draw <br /> The draw, or limit, angle (�, from a vertical reference) in the Somerset area ranges from about 8 <br /> to 21 degrees. The angle of draw measured for F-seam room-and-pillar mining at West Elk Mine, <br /> which has overburden rock lithology similar to the-E-seam, ranged from 11.3 to 16.1 degrees and <br /> averaged 14.4 degrees. The angle of draw for B-seam longwall mining at West Elk ranges from <br /> about 15 to 17 degrees after accounting for F-seam mining influence (Table 1). MCC collected <br /> survey data from the subsidence monuments following mining of E-seam longwall panel El. <br /> WWE's analysis of that data indicates that the mean angle of draw is approximately 16°, with a <br /> range of 14'to 19'predicted for the Southern Panels (Table 2) and Apache Rocks West(Table 3) <br /> mining areas. For the Sunset Trail mining area, the angle of draw is projected to range from 14' <br /> to 19' (Table 4). <br /> 831-032.912 Wright Water Engineers, Inc. <br /> December 2020 <br />