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The elevation of the valley bottom is 6,150 ft. From the valley bottom, the permit area extends <br />up to the crestal ridge of the Williams Fork Mountains. The crest of the Williams Fork <br />Mountains forms a ridge extending about 30 miles east-west at elevations between 7,400 and <br />7,800 feet. The Williams Fork River crosses through the mine permit area and flows into the <br />Yampa River in the northwest corner of the permit area. The Yampa River is one of the largest <br />tributaries of the upper Colorado River system. <br />Stratigraphic Setting. Bedrock at the ground surface in the Eagle permit area is a sequence of <br />sandstones, siltstones, shales, and coals that are part of the Cretaceous-age Williams Fork <br />Formation. The Williams Fork Formation is part of the regionally extensive Njesa Verde Group. <br />The Williams Fork Formation crops out along a six-mile wide belt that extends along the entire <br />length of the Williams Fork Mountains. The Williams Fork Formation is subdivided into the <br />following three units (in ascending stratigraphic order): the lower Williams Fork, the <br />Twentymile sandstone, and the upper Williams Fork. Approximate thicknesses are: lower <br />Williams Fork, 840 ft.; Twentymile sandstone, 120 ft.; and upper Williams Fork, 850 ft. <br />Unconsolidated alluvial deposits of Quaternary age fill stream drainages in the permit area and <br />surrounding areas. The alluvium is thickest in the Yampa and Williams Fork River valleys. <br />Coal Seam Stratigraphy. The coal seams mined at the Eagle Mine Complex are in the lower and <br />upper units of the Williams Fork Formation. Each seam is less than 10 feet thick. The No. 9 <br />Mine removes coal from the P seam in the upper Williams Fork Formation. The No. 5 Mine <br />removes coal from the F seam in the lower Williams Fork. The No. 6 Mine was planned to mine <br />coal from the E seam in the lower Williams Fork. (The adjacent surface pits of the Trapper Mine <br />take coal from the upper Williams Fork. The I seam of Trapper probably correlates to the P <br />seam of the Eagle No. 5.) <br />Geologic Structural Setting. The Eagle Mine Complex is situated on the northeast flank of the <br />northwest plunging Moffat Anticline. The Moffat Anticline is part of the larger-scale Axial <br />uplift that extends northwestward across northwest Colorado to the Uinta Mountains in northeast <br />Utah. The northeast limb of the Moffat Anticline dips northward into the Big Bottom syncline. <br />Although only small-displacement gravity faults have been found in the permit area, the large <br />displacement Moffat thrust fault probably lies several thousand feet beneath the ground surface <br />of the permit area. The surface trace of the Moffat thrust is two miles southwest of the permit <br />area. <br />Local Coal Mining History. Previous mining within the Eagle Mine Complex permit area <br />included: the Fields Mine which operated in the E seam during the 1930s; the Wise Mine and the <br />Wise Hill No. 2 which operated in the C seam (below the E seam) in the 1940s and 1950s; the <br />Leo White and Baker Mines which operated in the Hart seam (between the F seam and <br />Twentymile sandstone); and the Wise Hill Nos. 3 and 4, which operated in the Hart seam during <br />the 1970s. <br />Surface Water Features. Drainages within and adjacent to the permit area (on the north-facing <br />slope) are ephemeral and generally extend south to north down the slope in a dendritic pattern. <br />These drainages flow primarily in response to snowmelt or heavy rains. Flows in these drainages <br />that do not infiltrate into the ground or evaporate eventually enter the Williams Fork River, and <br />then flow the short distance to the confluence with the Yampa River in the northwest corner of <br />the permit area. <br />Eagle Mine Complex 5 Permit Renewal 05 <br />C-1981-044 May 22, 2009