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NOTE: All abandonment and reclamation activities have followed procedures set by the Bureau <br />of Land Management. Abandonment sealant consisted of either 1-100 pound or 2-50 pound bags <br />of "Bore-Gel" bentonite, mixed with 100 gallons of water per pound in a 200 gallon stock tank. <br />Once the hole was drilled to total depth, it was blown clean of cuttings and the mixed sealant <br />pumped through the drill string, until the sealant circulated to the top of the hole. The drill pipe <br />was then "tripped" out of the hole and additional sealant pumped into the hole, as the drill pipe <br />was withdrawn. In all cases, the sealant level would drop to the top of the unweathered bedrock, <br />typically at a depth between 10 and 20 feet. The drill rig would then move off the hole and onto <br />another location. Each of the holes was logged with geophysical tools. After logging, <br />Southwestern Construction of Nucla, Colorado, would complete final reclamation of each hole by <br />dumping 3-50 pound bags of bentonite chips into the hole, then shoveling cuttings into the hole to <br />a depth of 10 feet below the surface. The final ten feet of hole was then filled with sackrete. An <br />aluminum survey monument labeling each hole was set in the concrete at the surface. See <br />attached figure for diagram (Figure 1). Any remaining cuttings were removed or dispersed and <br />the area seeded with the approved seed mixture. <br />6 <br />