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FROM GLU$RSOC. • <br />Ms. Lemay <br />November 12, 1997 <br />Page Two <br />PHONE N0. 970 S65 100 Nov. 13 1997 03:06PM P3 <br />The landowner of the surface rights is the Bureau of Land Management <br />(BLM), a division of the U.S. Department of the Interior. The subsurface rights to <br />this land were conveyed to the American Cancer Society of Colorado, Inc. (ACS) <br />and the American Heart Association of Colorado, Inc. (AHA), both are Colorado <br />non-profit organizations. On 10 September 1997, the American Cancer Society <br />and American Heart Association were the Grantors of a Special Warranty Deed to <br />Daren R. Stone and Kathy J. Stone, 24600 County Road P, Cortez, CO. 81321 <br />(Grantees). For a sum of Five Thousand and 00/ 100 dollars ($5,000) the Grantors <br />granted, bargained, sold and conveyed to the Grantees the following real property <br />in Montezuma County: <br />The Min 1 in at Only <br />The oil, gas and other minerals lying in or under or that may be <br />produced from the described land. Correspondence was conducted <br />between Mr. Charles B. Stone, Director of Finance for the American <br />Cancer Society, and Kathy Stone, wife of Darren R. Stone. <br /> <br />In the Special Warranty Deed, the Grantors mistakenly granted 320 acres <br />to Daren Stone. In fact, they own mineral rights to approximately 160 acres. We <br />understand from papers filed at the Montezuma County Court House that this <br />sales contract between the (srantors and the Grantees is not finalized until <br />issuance of a pending approval of a Reclamation Permit by the Colorado <br />Department of Minerals and Geology. <br />We request that the Department of Minerals and Geology closely monitor <br />this Application, since there are several integral parts of the Application that seem <br />incomplete, inaccurate or misleading. Some of our concerns are: <br />w <br />8urrouadiag Land Uses: <br />On this properly there aze significant and important cultural resources <br />(ruins, artifacts, and possibly human remains) representing the ancestral <br />Puebloan (Anasazi) cultures. This section of the Montezuma Valley <br />represents one of the most significant archaeological regions in America. <br />Less than one mile northeast of this property lie Mud Springs Pueblo, a <br />significant ancestral Puebloan site that has been owned and protected by <br />the Archaeological Conservancy since 1982. About three miles south of the <br />proposed Stone Gravel Pit is Yucca House National Monument, a similar <br />site that has been preserved and protected by the National Pazks Service <br />since 1906 and is the first archaeological site in the United States protected <br />by the Antiquities Act. <br />