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1 <br />2 <br />3 <br />4 <br />5 <br />6 <br />7 <br />8 <br />9 <br />10 <br />11 <br />12 <br />13 <br />14 <br />15 <br />16 <br />17 <br />18 <br />19 <br />20 <br />21 <br />22 <br />23 <br />24 <br />LS i <br />C <br />• ~ J <br />have not e:•:cavated until 1979. I saGa what I considered to be <br />evidence of very recent excavation in the pit, as well as <br />stoc}:piling. <br />THE CHAIRMAN: Mark, it wouldn't take but just <br />a few minutes to show those pictures- Laould you mind doing <br />I that? <br />PdR. LOYE: Sure. <br />(The slides could not he sho\on at this particular <br />time because there was no lamp on the projector.) <br />P45. WINTER: Could you descrS.be the environmental <br />damage? <br />P9^. ZALkIPID: D]arl:, can you elaborate on the <br />environmental damage of the site? <br />b]F. LOYE: Them is a large open pit ~.lith quite <br />a bit of_ old stoc}:pile material, the actual pit itself is <br />probably about 4 acres in catcnsion with p.i.led up gravel around <br />it. They had been G•ro.rking on the western edge of the pit, it <br />looked like fairly recently, there were scrape mar};s on the <br />side. In fact, it looked like they were of some recent vintage <br />to me. 7t caas obviously an onyoinq operation, it was obviously <br />a very old operation in the sense it had been there for acahile. <br />It was basically a flat area, and e~:cavated down~•rard to a depth <br />of. probably 15 feet, something to that effect. There was no <br />evidence of topsoil stockpiling on the site. And it caas <br />obaious that there had been no reclamation done on it at all. <br />1Yll t. \'(.1NYF. \'(Clid IS \t~('1.i 7l..S. /C('. <br />/ n•n%uv/ Sfro nhnnd h'epn•u v~ <br />I APO rhr.n~~dl,~ Fond <br />1 ndnnn. Cnlumd.~ .CU N! <br />