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GENERAL44240
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GENERAL44240
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Last modified
8/24/2016 8:13:02 PM
Creation date
11/23/2007 12:55:46 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
DRMS Permit Index
Permit No
C1981038
IBM Index Class Name
General Documents
Doc Date
10/12/1986
Doc Name
PROPOSED DECISION & FINDINGS OF COMPLIANCE FOR PR2
Permit Index Doc Type
FINDINGS
Media Type
D
Archive
No
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_P1_ <br />Three coal horizons exist in the Lower Coal-Bearing member; the "A" (Old King) <br />horizon, the "B" (Somerset) horizon, and the "C" (Bear) horizon. The "A" <br />horizon is immediately above the Rollins sandstone and is not currently <br />mined. The "B" horizon contains two coal seams and occurs about 20 to 120 <br />feet above the Rollins sandstone. This horizon is presently mined by U.S. <br />Steel at the Somerset Mine and may be mined at the Mt. Gunnison Mine. The <br />"C" horizon contains one coal seam that occurs 50 to 100 feet above the "B" <br />horizon. This horizon has been mined at U.S. Steel's Elk Creek Mine and the <br />Bear No. 1 and 2 Mines, and is currently mined at the Bear No. 3 Mine. It may <br />be mined at the Mt. Gunnison Mine in the future. <br />The Upper Coal-Bearing (Paonia) member consists of 200 to 500 feet of gray <br />shales; interbedded, buff-colored, lenticu]ar sandstones; and coals. The top <br />of this member is generally considered to be capped by a massive, <br />cliff-forming sandstone. However, like the similar sandstone at the top of <br />the Lower Coal member, this sandstone is not a single persistent bed. Drill <br />hole data for both the Mt. Gunnison and the Somerset life-of-mine areas show <br />this sandstone unit to occur as several lenticular sandstones at slightly <br />different stratigraphic horizons. <br />Three coal horizons have been identified in the Upper Coal member; the "D" <br />(Oliver) Horizon, the "E" (Hawk's Nest) horizon, and the "F" horizon. The "D" <br />horizon occurs directly above the "massive" sandstone of the Lower <br />Coal-Bearing member and contains three seams. This horizon is currently being <br />mined in the Orchard Valley Mine, and is planned to be mined at the Hawk's <br />Nest Mine: This seam may also be mined in the future at the Mt. Gunnison <br />Mine, and by Bear Coal in the Bear No. 3 Mine. The "E" horizon occurs about <br />130 feet above the "D" horizon and contains two coal seams. This horizon is <br />currently being mined at the Hawk's Nest Mine and at the Blue Ribbon Mine. It <br />may be mined at the Mt. Gunnison Mine and at the Bear No. 3 Mine in the <br />future. The "F° horizon contains two coal seams and presently is only mined <br />at the Mt. Gunnison Mine. Coal seams of the "F" horizon do not exist to the <br />north of the North Fork in thicknesses sufficient for mining. <br />The Barren (Undifferentiated) member of the Mesaverde Formation consists of up <br />to 1,600 feet of terrestrial sedimentary rocks. This unit consists of <br />fine-grained, buff-colored, lenticular sandstones; gray shales and thin <br />lenticular coal beds. The sandstones predominate and are highly lenticular, <br />discontinuous and of limited lateral extent in outcrop (Johnson, 1948). <br />The Mesaverde Formation is unconformably overlain by the Tertiary Age Ruby or <br />Wasatch Formation. This formation consists of red to buff-colored shales, red <br />sandstones, and red to gray conglomerates. The sediments of this formation <br />are weathered volcanic rocks. The Ohio Creek conglomerate is the basal unit <br />within the formation and is 100 to 200 feet thick. <br />Igneous intrusive rocks exist within the North Fork Drainage Basin. A diorite <br />plug about 1,000 feet in diameter outcrops along Hubbard Creek in the SE 1/4 <br />of Section 7. This may represent the erosional remnants of a volcanic flow <br />feeder. Sills have injected the Lower Coal-Bearing member, particularly the <br />"B" and "C" seams. These sills consis of diorite and appear to have their <br />source to the northwest of Terror Cree . <br />
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