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GENERAL33643
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GENERAL33643
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Last modified
8/24/2016 7:55:30 PM
Creation date
11/23/2007 7:41:57 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
DRMS Permit Index
Permit No
M1977376
IBM Index Class Name
General Documents
Doc Date
5/18/1993
Doc Name
MEMO DECISION & ORDER RELATED TO DESTORS OBJECTION DATED 10/02/92 TO CLAIM OF MLB DEBOTS MOTION DATE
Media Type
D
Archive
No
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from the mine. Running roughly pazallel to the mine, a shallow fork of the South Arkansas <br />River bows through the valley floor. <br />The mine itself consists of two quarries that include 216.427 acres of patented <br />mine sites. The upper Quarry is cut out of the mountainside at 10,850 feet above sea level <br />and the lower Quarry at 10,150 feet. Unconsolidated material slides down the high wall <br />from the lip of the upper Quarry to the base of the high wall of the lower Quarry. The low <br />walls associated with the lower Quarry are constructed at a steep gradient 50 to 75 feet high, <br />and consist of rubbleized waste rock material. A slope of processing fines (finely crushed <br />material created by crushing and screening limestone) leads toward the Arkansas River bed <br />150 feet below the lower Quarry. The Quarry is a hard rock surface mine; there are no <br />underground tunnels or mine shafts. Limestone was loosened from the quarry walls by <br />blasting, screened to size the aggregate limestone and loaded for shipment by rail or truck <br />to the furnaces in Pueblo. No chemical mining processes were used at the Quarry. <br />Two unoccupied buildings stand at one end of the lower Quarry: aone-story <br />shop office constructed of concrete block on a shallow foundation, and a rugged timber <br />framed crusher and tipple with a metal roof. The tipple was used to load the limestone into <br />railroad cars or trucks. Various other small outbuildings are scattered through the Quarry. <br />A haul road provides access to the upper Quarry. The haul road zig-zags sharply through <br />the limestone mountainside from the upper Quarry downward towards a sediment pond at <br /> <br />
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