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GENERAL30772
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Last modified
8/24/2016 7:48:14 PM
Creation date
11/23/2007 6:48:16 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
DRMS Permit Index
Permit No
C1981018
IBM Index Class Name
General Documents
Doc Date
5/13/2002
Doc Name
County Special Use Permit Application - 9/200
Permit Index Doc Type
Other Permits
Media Type
D
Archive
No
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Portions of reconstructed County Road 65, the Refuse Haul Road and the 138-kV powerline cross <br />above an area that is expected to experience subsidence from longwall mining. During the active <br />subsidence, these facilities will be monitored and corrected as necessary. Also, Lincoln Reservoir and <br />Halandras Reservoir No. 1 overlie areas that will subside. They will be repaired as necessary. <br />I.A.6.b Subsidence Control. BME intends to plan and control the surface subsidence by employing <br />the latest technology of ground control. <br />Subsidence is anticipated and its magnitude and extent have been predicted. The magnitude, extent <br />and duration will be minimized to the greatest extent possible by an efficient mine layout, barrier and <br />chain pillars, and a rapid and effective mining system and sequence. <br />Longwall mining will produce the most subsidence, but the active subsidence will be (relatively) <br />short-lived, lasting less than 5 years after mining with the majority of subsidence occurring within the <br />first several days. Room and pillar mining will minimize initial surface subsidence during room <br />advances and lower the surface an almost undetectable 0.025 feet or less. However, wherever chain <br />pillars are not extracted upon the retreat from a panel the so-called "permanent" pillars will deteriorate <br />with time, and delayed subsidence incidents may result. Such unpredictable pillar failures have <br />occurred over 100 years after mining. Longwall mining results in more subsidence than room and <br />pillar mining principally because of greater extraction of the coal. Longwalling extracts nearly 100 <br />percent of the coal within a longwall panel. Longwalling generally achieves an overall mine extraction <br />in excess of 80 percent of the total resource. Room and pillar mining rarely recovers more than 55 <br />percent of the total resource. Efficient pillar extraction, if feasible, may result in surface subsidence <br />nearly equal in magnitudeto that produced by longwall mining. <br />Ninety-five to 98 percent of the subsidence resulting from longwall mining occurs during active mining. <br />The remaining residual subsidence, 2 to 5 percent of the total, has been monitored for up to 4-1/2 <br />years after cessation of mining. Long-term subsidence hazards are not expected with longwall mining <br />since such hazards are all manifested in a fairly short time. <br />Longwall mining at the Deserado Mine, as elsewhere, takes place where seam thicknesses are <br />relatively uniform. Longwall equipment can adjust to only a limited range of seam thicknesses. Room <br />and pillar mining will be used where changes in seam thickness require more flexible mining <br />equipment. <br />Rio Blanco County Special Use Permit#81-1 <br />Exhibit6 -Mining Plan <br />September2000 <br />8 <br />
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