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succession of operators. The new operator will be Grand Valley Coal Company. <br />The operator requested an extension for decision until February 13, 1993. The <br />Division sent a preliminary adequacy letter to the operator on January 13, 1993. <br />The operator responded to adequacy questions on January 26, 1993. Public <br />notification for renewal was published in the Daily Sentinel on December 8, <br />15, 22, and 29, 1992. <br />Comments regarding Grand Valley Coal Company's controlling company were <br />received from the Pennsylvania Bureau of Mining and Reclamation. Outstanding <br />compliance and cessation orders in Pennsylvania have since been resolved. An <br />applicant/violator check through the Office of Surface Mining revealed that <br />Grand Valley Coal Company's parent company, Adobe Mining, has several <br />outstanding audit appeals. Until these appeals have been satisfactorily <br />resolved and the Division receives proof of the resolution, the Division shall <br />grant conditional approval of the permit renewal. <br />2. Description of the Environment <br />The mine site is located at an elevation of approximately 5600 feet. Land use <br />within the permit and adjacent areas is grazing and wildlife habitat. Grazing <br />is generally confined to the lower-lying canyon bottom lands. The upland area <br />consists of steep slopes and rugged topography and is primarily used by <br />wildlife. Some irrigated agriculture is practiced in the East Salt Creek <br />Valley, which is adjacent to the permit area. <br />Munger Canyon is located in the Roan Cliffs just north of Grand Valley. This <br />area is northeast of the Garmesa Anticline and on the south flank of the <br />Piceance basin. Local strata dip to the northeast into the Piceance basin at <br />one to three degrees and strike north-northwest. No faults have been <br />identified in the Munger Canyon mine plan area. The adjacent McClave Canyon <br />Mine (north of the Munger Canyon Mine) is located within a graben structure <br />which is bounded by two large, high-angle displacement faults. <br />The Mount Garfield Formation is the coal-bearing formation in the Book Cliffs <br />Coal Field. The Mount Garfield Formation consists of fine-grained and medium- <br />grained sandstones and gray shales. The Sego Sandstone underlies the Mount <br />Garfield Formation and the Hunter Formation overlies it. Included within the <br />Hunter Formation are the massive cliff-forming sandstones which outcrop along <br />the canyon walls of East Salt Creek. The Mount Garfield Formation contains <br />four coal zones; the Loma, Carbonera, Cameo and Palisade Zones. The Upper <br />Carbonera and Cameo seams will be mined at the Munger Canyon Mine. <br />No major bedrock aquifers of regional extent have been identified in the <br />permit and adjacent area by the applicant. Drilling has indicated that the <br />Cameo coal seam becomes increasingly saturated downdip from its outcrop in <br />Munger Canyon. The Cameo seam subcrops below the East Salt Creek alluvium. <br />This indicates that East Salt Creek, several miles from the mine, is the <br />recharge source for the Cameo coal seam. Some local lenticular strata of <br />limited extent have been identified above the Cameo seam which contain perched <br />ground water. Underground mining activities at the Munger Canyon Mine will be <br />updip and away from the saturated zone in the Cameo seam (see Figure 4.4-1 of <br />Volume III of the application). <br />Alluvial ground water exists within the East Salt Creek alluvium. The East <br />Salt Creek Valley contains an intermittent stream channel, <br />-~- <br />