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2010-11-02_HYDROLOGY - C1981010
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2010-11-02_HYDROLOGY - C1981010
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Last modified
8/24/2016 4:26:27 PM
Creation date
11/2/2010 1:41:52 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
DRMS Permit Index
Permit No
C1981010
IBM Index Class Name
HYDROLOGY
Doc Date
11/2/2010
Doc Name
2009 AHR Review Letter
From
DRMS
To
Trapper Mining, Inc
Permit Index Doc Type
Hydrology Report
Email Name
RDZ
Media Type
D
Archive
No
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<br /> <br />Requirement <br /> <br />Regulation Require- <br />ment <br />complied <br />with? <br />(yes / no) <br /> <br />Comment <br /> Each pit disrupts the potentiometric surface of confined aquifers. <br />S. Restoration of After reclamation, monitoring data show full recovery of the <br />ground water CDRMS potentiometric surface outside of backfilled pits and partial <br />recharge to regulation yes recovery of potentiometric surface inside backfilled pits. Spoil <br /> springs may reduce groundwater recharge by diverting <br />approximate pre- 4.05.11(3) groundwater flow to surface flow. However, Trapper's expected <br />mining rate total aggregate spoil spring discharge of less than 1 cfs will be too <br /> small to reduce recharge below the approximate pre-mining rate. <br /> The Probable Hydrologic Consequences (PHC) section of <br /> Trapper's mining and reclamation permit (Section 4.8.3) discusses <br /> the possibility of a high-TDS plume of coal spoil leachate forming <br /> in the Third White Sandstone downgradient from the Trapper <br /> Mine in Section 29-T6N-90W. Such a plume would not be <br /> expected to form until several years, possibly decades, after the pit <br /> is reclaimed in the adjoining Section 32. Compared to pre-mining <br /> ground water conditions, such a plume would have elevated <br />T. Prevention of dissolved solids, which could possibly impair the use of ground <br />adverse impacts CDRMS water in the Third White Sandstone. <br />to ground water regulation yes Spoil leachate could also invade the alluvium in Flume Gulch by <br />systems outside 4.05.11 seeping down into the subsurface from spoil springs flowing on the <br />the permit area land surface in the gulch. <br /> The Third White Sandstone is monitored in the area of the possible <br /> plume in well GP-9, and the alluvium is monitored with the Coy <br /> well. Monitoring data from both wells indicate that a plume has <br /> not formed. For the Third White Sandstone, this could be the <br /> consequence of artesian conditions that are preventing invasion in <br /> the subsurface by spoil leachate. <br />Page 4
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