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2011-02-14_PERMIT FILE - C1980007A (3)
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2011-02-14_PERMIT FILE - C1980007A (3)
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Last modified
12/13/2018 7:01:03 AM
Creation date
4/14/2011 9:10:05 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
DRMS Permit Index
Permit No
C1980007A
IBM Index Class Name
Permit File
Doc Date
2/14/2011
Doc Name
SUBSIDENCE EVALUATION
Section_Exhibit Name
Exhibit 60E Subsidence Evaluation for the South of Divide and Dry Fork Mining Areas
Media Type
D
Archive
Yes
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Subsidence Evaluation for the <br />Exhibit 60E South of Divide and Dry Fork Mining Areas Page 5 <br />4.0 FIELD RECOGNITION OF SUBSIDENCE AND NON - SUBSIDENCE <br />FEATURES IN THE WEST ELK MINING AREA <br />Four different types of features are observed in the West Elk mining area: 1) subsidence cracks <br />and bulges, 2) construction cracks, 3) desiccation cracks, and 4) gravity- induced tension cracks. <br />They can be distinguished easily in some areas— where, for example, no mining has occurred in <br />that area. However, in other areas they may be difficult to distinguish, such as in areas that have <br />been mined, but where conditions are also favorable for construction, desiccation, and /or gravity - <br />induced tension cracks to occur. <br />4.1 Subsidence Cracks and Compression Features <br />Subsidence cracks are open cracks that most likely occur in areas where the ground surface has <br />undergone extension during subsidence processes. Cracks as much as 3.5 inches wide, for <br />example, have been observed in sandstone outcrops at Apache Rocks where zones of maximum <br />extension (or tension in rock mechanics terminology) occur. As discussed in Section 5.3.2, <br />cracks close —and the underlying rocks become compressive —below the neutral surface (the <br />boundary between tensile and compressive strain) of the rocks downwarping as a single unit. <br />Therefore, any water located in cracks above the neutral surface is blocked from traveling <br />downward into rocks in compression below the neutral surface. <br />Cracks in the zone of maximum tension occur approximately perpendicular to the orientation of <br />the longwall mining faces (transverse cracks) and parallel to the orientation of the longwall <br />mining panels (longitudinal cracks). The cracks commonly do not conform to such a precise <br />pattern. As with other deformational processes in nature, crack orientation may be quite <br />variable. <br />The transverse tension cracks that locally occur above the longwall mining face often have a <br />dynamic history. They open when the longwall face moves beneath a particular area, and they <br />close again when the longwall face moves out of the area of mining influence of the area. <br />Longitudinal cracks occur above and roughly parallel to the edges of the longwall mining panel <br />above the gate road pillars and the haulageway (or beltway) pillars. Longitudinal tension cracks <br />commonly remain open, particularly in areas above gate roads with a rigid - pillar configuration. <br />The cracks may stay open or close in areas above gate roads with a combination rigid - <br />pillar /yield - pillar configuration. However, as discussed in Section 5.3.2, it is unlikely that cracks <br />will occur in colluvium and alluvium in the stream valleys of the South of Divide and Dry Fork <br />mining areas. <br />Compression features (bulges and warps) also occur above the longwall mining panels in areas <br />where the ground surface undergoes compression in the subsidence process. The compression <br />features, which occur toward the center of the mining panel in zones of maximum compression, <br />are usually more difficult to recognize. They often are masked, or absorbed, by soil and <br />colluvium, or are hidden in the brush and grass. They also may be indistinguishable from natural <br />humps and mounds in the soil and colluvium. <br />0 <br />831 - 032.810 Wright Water Engineers, Inc. <br />on <br />
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