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1 <br />March 1, 1995 for the first time since monitoring began. Crest gage and sample station SW24-1 <br />along Red Wash above the mine was washed out by a flash flood in the Spring of 1983. Grab <br />samples were collected at SW24-1 until July 1986 when a new single stage sampler was installed. <br />The stock water ponds at SW6-1 and SW33-1 are usually dry. Crest gage and sample collection <br />' stations SW1-1, SW11-1, and SW31-1 are monitored quarterly; however, run off events often <br />contain such high quantities of suspended solids that sampler tubes are plugged and the gaging <br />device silted in. Constant servicing of these stations is necessary with no guarantee that the next <br />' run off event will be measured and a sample collected. Kenney Reservoir has inundated the White <br />River alluvium below Scullion Gulch and grab sample stations SW11-2 and SW12-1. <br />' Following review of the Second Annual Deserado Mine Hydrology Report, Colorado Mine Land <br />Reclamation Division (CMLRD) suggested that surface water monitoring sites SW12-1 and SW11-2 <br />be dropped from the monitoring program because they were inundated by Kenney Reservoir. <br />Further, CMLRD suggested that monitoring of surface water sites SW6-1, SW31-1, and SW33-1 <br />be discontinued until one year before mining related disturbance occurs in Federal Coal Lease <br />' C-8424. Accordingly, Western Fuels submitted an application for a Technical Revision on 7/22/87 <br />to eliminate surface water monitoring at SW12-1 and SW11-2 and to discontinue surface water <br />' monitoring at sites SW6-1, SW31-1 and SW33-1. Surface water monitoring was to resume at <br />SW6-1, SW31-1, and SW33-1 one year before surface related disturbance occurs in Federal Coal <br />Lease C-8424. The Technical Revision request was approved. Monitoring of these sites began in <br />April, 1996 with an anticipation that mining within the lease C-8424 would take place in the neaz <br />future. There are seven (7) surface monitoring stations currently being monitored: SW1-1, SW11-1, <br />' SW23-1, SW24-1, SW6-1, SW31-1 and SW33-1. <br />Samples collected from the surface water stations are analyzed for thetwenty-two (22) water quality <br />' parameters listed in Table 2-1. <br />t 2.1.2 Ground Water Monltoring Program <br />The Deserado Mine groundwater monitoring program consists of monitoring water depths and water <br />t quality from bedrock strata, the White River alluvium and the alluvium of the Red Wash tributary <br />north of Refuse Disposal Area 2/3. Bedrock hydrology monitoring is conducted at 15 holes on seven <br />' (7) locations while alluvial hydrology monitoring is conducted at two locations -the one remaining <br />after Kenney Reservoir was filled (QAL-5) and the alluvial monitoring hole RM-1 near the refuse <br />disposal areas. The locations of each of the groundwater monitoring sRes is shown on Plate 1 in <br />the pocket of this report. Bedrock monitoring consists of collecting hydrologic data from monitoring <br />holes and multiple completions at each location in order to monitor three zones: the Upper <br />Sandstone Facies; the Coal and Siltstone Faaes; and the Lower Sandstone Facies. The Upper <br />1 <br />3 <br /> <br />