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<br /> <br /> III ~II~II~II~~II~II <br />Cripple Creek & Victor Gold Mining Company 999 <br />~~ <br />A Joint Venture - Pikes Peak Mining Company, Manager <br />(1 t T Operations OHlce Englewood Office <br />!`~x7 Y P.O. Box 191, 2755 State Highway 67 5251 DTC Parkway, Suite 700, Englewood <br />Viclor, Colorado 80860 Colorado 80111 <br />(719) 689-2977 • FAX (719) 689-3254 (303) 889-0700 • FAX (303) 889-0707 <br />February 17, 1995 RE~E~V <br /> En <br /> Ff B <br />Mr. Serhan Keffelew Divis o <br />'S, 1995 <br />t <br />l not ~~~~e~ars <br />Colorado Department <br />of Natural <br />Resources ~~ <br />~ Goolpgy <br />Division of Mines and Geology <br />Office of Mined Land Reclamation ~` "~@p/p <br /> <br />1313 Sherman Street, Room 215 9y <br />Denver, Colorado 80203 <br />Reference: Cresson Project: Permit M-80-244: Response to OMLR Letter of February 6. <br />1995 Regarding "Soil Stockpile Location and Contours. <br />Dear Mr. Keffelew: <br />In response to your letter of February 6, 1995, The Cripple Creek & Victor Gold Mining <br />Company offers the following information. The yellow, green, and purple lines are survey and <br />drafting lines that may be ignored when reviewing the maps. The yellow lines designate the <br />edge of the stockpile. The green lines are original contours which are used to compute volume. <br />The purple lines are the toe and crest of the stockpiles. <br />The contour interval is five feet. Another set of maps is enclosed showing the current contours, <br />which are labelled. These maps are the same as those provided on January 31, 1995 with the <br />addition of the labels. The purple (magenta?) lines remain to assist in delineation. <br />Another map showing the current locations of these three stockpiles at a 1"=600' scale is also <br />enclosed. <br />]f one were to roughly estimate the amount of soil available for the disturbed area, one could <br />take the area approved for disturbance, approximately 600 acres, there would be about 0.507335 <br />feet of soil available for the entire surface area. Of course the entire area has (1) not yet been <br />disturbed and not all of the soil has been removed and not all disturbed areas are to be covered <br />with additional stockpiled soil (e.g., an area disturbed by a diversion will have been seeded on <br />fill slopes and not seeded on cut slopes in bedrock). Therefore more than 0.5 feet of soil are <br />currently available for replacement. <br />