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impact to the quantity or quality of surface water within or adjacent to the Cazbon <br />Junction Mine. <br />Grouud Water <br />Ground water impacts aze discussed throughout this section. The mining and reclamation <br />plan has been designed to minimise or alleviate impacts to the quantity and quality of <br />groundwater at and adjacent to the Cazbon Junction Mine. The characteristics and <br />stratigraphy of the coal seam and overburden prevent discharges of ground water in the <br />areas of potential impact. Further, based on well monitoring up gradient, mid-mine and <br />down gradient, no significant impacts to groundwater quantity or quality have been <br />identified or substantiated during the operational life of the Cazbon Junction Mine. <br />Probable Hydrologic Consequences <br />During the re-permitting of the mine in 1993, it was concluded that impacts to the <br />hydrologic balance would be minimal due to the mitigative measures the company <br />planned. The only significant change to the existing conditions at the mine since that <br />finding has been the mining of sand and gravel under a permit issued by the Division under <br />the Colorado Mined Land Reclamation Act (CRS 34-32-101 et seg). The subsequent <br />mining of sand and gravel at the site has increased the acreage of surface disturbance by <br />approximately 33 acres. This acreage is less than the total amount proposed to be <br />disturbed by the Carbon Junction operation at buildout. The sand and gravel operations <br />are conducted within the proposed disturbed area of the coal mine and minimise impacts <br />to the surface water regime through the use of the same sediment control technology as <br />the coal mine. Groundwater impacts from the sand and gravel operation are not <br />anticipated as the operation is mining dry alluvial terrace gravels. Therefore, the <br />predictions of the PHC remain valid. <br />TROS, TRl l (v 1.0) 5-54 Revised 9/97, S/02 <br />