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REP47025
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REP47025
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Entry Properties
Last modified
8/25/2016 12:50:28 AM
Creation date
11/27/2007 11:39:12 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
DRMS Permit Index
Permit No
C1980007
IBM Index Class Name
Report
Doc Name
HISTORIC RECORD STUDY AREA BASELINE CHARACTERIZATION 1996 PRECIPITATION SOILS VEGETATION WEST ELK MI
Permit Index Doc Type
REVEG MONITORING REPORT
Media Type
D
Archive
No
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I. INTRODUCTION <br />The expansion of the West Elk Mine facilities to Sylvester Gulch with the attendant <br />disturbance of the Dry Meadow Reference Area illustrates one of the problems with <br />maintaining and managing vegetation reference areas over the life of a mining <br />operation. Mining operations, being dynamic and responding to changing conditions, <br />often modify the mining and reclamation plans during the course of their life of <br />operations. As vegetation communities are dynamic assemblages of vegetation which <br />respond to outside influences (succession, predation, fire, micro-climatic change, <br />management), their basic characteristics may also change significantly over the life of a <br />mine. Further, since the majority of revegetation is not directed toward the specific re- <br />establishment of disturbed vegetation communities, the usefulness of retaining reference <br />azeas as determinants of revegetation success is rightfully questioned. <br />There are two options available for establishing revegetation success criteria which do <br />not rely on reference azeas; technical standards and historic records. Technical <br />standazds rely on published information for a specific vegetation community, which <br />provides quantitative values for revegetation success parameters (specifically vegetation <br />cover, herbaceous production, woody plant density, or species diversity). In order to <br />use technical standazds for revegetation success criteria, the published literature must be <br />demonstrated to be specifically applicable to the vegetation community to be disturbed. <br />The technical information must also be from vegetation communities equivalent to <br />those found at the mine. Additionally, the technical standards must be approved by the <br />Colorado Division of Minerals and Geology (CDMG) and the federal Office of Surface <br />Mining Reclamation and Enforcement. <br />Historic records rely on the quantitative sampling of an area to be disturbed or <br />equivalent area for several growing seasons. Revegetation success standards are then <br />derived from the mean of the parameters sampled over several growing seasons. The <br />advantage of a historic record revegetation success criterion is that it is site specific and <br />reflects the growth conditions which can be expected at the reclamation site. Further, <br />economic and time savings aze realized at bond release, as there is no need to sample <br />one or more reference areas to establish the revegetation success criteria values. Nor is <br />there the need to maintain reference azeas during the life of the mine. <br />This report discusses the development of the historic record concept and 1996 sampling <br />as proposed and conceived for the West Elk Mine. Information in this report addresses <br />the existing precipitation regime, soils, and vegetative condition of the historic record <br />study area at the mine. <br />-1- <br />
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