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consists of fine grained to medium grained sandstones, gray shales, and coal bearing zones. The Sego <br />Sandstone underlies the Mount Garfield Formation. Overlying the Mount Garfield Formation is the Hunter <br />Formation which contains massive cliff-forming sandstones [hat outcrop along the canyon walls of East Salt <br />Creek. The Mount Garfield Formation contains four coal zones; the Loma, Carbonera, Cameo, and Palisade <br />zones. The Cameo seam is mined at the McClane Canyon Mine. <br />The occurrence of ground water within and adjacent to the McClane Canyon Mine permit area is controlled <br />primarily by the combination of local topography, stratigraphy and geologic structure. Drilling has <br />indicated that the Cameo seam becomes increasingly saturated downdip (northeast) from its outcrop along <br />the side slopes of the East Salt Creek drainage basin. This is depicted on Figure 4.2-3 of Volume II of the <br />permit application. As can be seen on the figure, the saturated zone extends downdip towards the northeast <br />along anorthwest-southeast trending line. The outcrop line of the coal as well as the East Salt Creek <br />drainage, run roughly north-south in the vicinity of the permit area. Recharge to the Cameo coal seam <br />occurs in an area where the coal seam subcrops in the East Salt Creek alluvium approximately two miles <br />north of the McClane Canyon Mine permit azea. The subcrop of the coal seam along East Salt Creek was <br />created as the stream gradually cut through the sedimentary strata to the point where the stream channel <br />intersected the Cameo coal seam. The underground workings of the McClane Canyon Mine extend roughly <br />eastward into the Cameo seam from a point where the coal seam outcrops in McClane Canyon. McClane <br />Canyon is a small tributary canyon to the East Salt Creek drainage. In addition to the saturated portions of <br />the Cameo seam, some local lenticulaz strata of limited extent situated above the Cameo seam have been <br />found to contain ground water perched within the strata. Saturation of the Cameo seam occurs at about <br />5580 ft. elevation. <br />East Salt Creek is an intermittent stream tributary [o the Colorado River. The East Salt Creek Valley has <br />been designated as an alluvial valley floor (AVF), with both undeveloped rangeland and irrigated hayland <br />mapped on the AVF in the vicinity of the mine. Existing and proposed surface disturbances associated with <br />the mine are located in the McClane Canyon drainage basin upstream from the AVF boundary, with the <br />exception of office trailer facilities and the lower portion of the access road, which are situated within the <br />boundaries of the AVF. <br />The climate in the region is semi-arid. Prevailing winds at or near ground level at the mine are dictated by <br />the orientation of the deeply incised McClane Canyon. The annual average precipitation within the permit <br />area increases with elevation from approximately 10 inches along East Salt Creek, up to 15" on the ridges <br />above 7000 feet. <br />Soils in the permit area are well drained to excessively well drained and have formed in alluvial or colluvial <br />sediments. Soils are deepest in the valley bottoms and become shallower along the canyon sideslopes where <br />they intersperse with bare rock. Most of the soils are rated fair to good as sources of topsoil for reclamation. <br />Limitations exist for subsoils in the alluvial deposits along valley bottoms due to high sodium content. <br />Vegetation types within and adjacent to the permit area are broadly classified as lower montane. Three <br />primary vegetation types occur in the permit and adjacent area. A greasewood shrubland type occupies the <br />flat terrain along the East Salt Creek drainage where soils are deep, well drained and often very sodic and <br />moderately saline. Shadscale shrubland borders the greasewood shrubland along the dry, steep, south facing <br />slopes in the shallower soils which are interspersed with rock outcrops. Juniper woodland is found along <br />the ridge tops and steep north and west facing slopes of shallow soils and rock outcrops. These vegetation <br />types are common to western Colorado and Utah. <br />Current and historical land use within the permit area is livestock grazing and wildlife habitat. Cattle aze <br />run seasonally within the rangelands and grazeable woodlands. <br />7 <br />