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RULE 2 - PERMITS <br />4.700 in 2009. Accompanying the TDS increase is a change to greater proportions of calcium, <br />magllesiunl and sulfate in the water. <br />Ground�N ater RiLyhts and Use <br />Data on permitted water \\ells \\lthin one mile of the permit l \rea boundary were obtained front the <br />Colorado Division of Water Rights on -line mapping system (('D�VIZ. 2012). A total of 48 permitted <br />water wells are present within one mile of the permit area. Of those 48 \\ells. 30 are used only for <br />01'01,111d\water nionitoring. A suninlary of pertinent data for the 18 wells Used for purposes other than <br />groundwater monitoring is listed in Table 2.04.7 -T4. Of those 18 wells, 11 are used for domestic <br />water suppl}'. two are used for livestock water, three are used for industrial purposes, one is used for <br />domestic and commercial purposes. and one is used for commercial and industrial purposes. Except <br />for three wells located just inside the northern boundary of the permit area. all are located north or \\ est <br />of the permit area. The 14 reported \well depths range from 125 feet to 1,000 feet and average 475 feet. <br />the 14 reported depths to water range from 0 to 244 feet and average 58 feet, and the eight reported <br />yields range from 6 to 15 gallons per minute (gpm) and avera` ,,e 11.7 gpnl. <br />Surface Water Information <br />Tile following subsections present Current information oil the Occurrence, quantity, gUallty and use of <br />surface water in the PSCM permit area and adjacent at-ca. Surface \\ater withdrawals in the PSCM <br />permit area and adjacent area Include those front ditches, reser \'olrs. and springs. Surface Water is put <br />to a variety of beneficial uses, partiCUlarly irrigation and stock watering, with lesser amounts of <br />domestic and industrial use, and a few instances of other uses. The significance of surface water <br />resources relates to potential ininin`—related impacts on Surface runoff characteristics, perennial <br />drainages. and disturbed -area or mine water discharge to surface drainages. The following sections <br />characterize surface water occurrence and conditions as a basis for evaluation of these potential <br />impacts. <br />Mine Area Watersheds, Surface Water Occurrence, and Relationship to Mining Disturbance <br />The regional surface water conditions were described in Section 2.04.5, General Description of <br />Hydrology and Geology. As in the general area, surface water occurrence, movement, and quality in <br />the immediate mine area are generally controlled by the semi -arid climate, topography, and geology, <br />and, to a lesser degree, the adjacent previous surface coal mining. Surface water conditions have been <br />studied using data obtained from a number of surface sampling locations near the mine, including both <br />flowing streams and spoil springs. Many of the surface water sampling locations were established <br />following approval by the CDRMS in conjunction with permitting and operations for the nearby Yoast <br />and Seneca II Mines, and have been in operation for more than 10 years. During 2008, the CDRMS <br />approved using the information collected from these sites in order to describe the quantity and quality <br />of surface water in the immediate mine area and adjacent area to represent baseline conditions. Data <br />collected at these sites during 2008 -2009 and years prior are presented in subsequent sections to <br />characterize baseline conditions including seasonality as appropriate. A field inventory to identify <br />potential springs and seeps within and adjacent to the proposed disturbance area was conducted in <br />2009. Results of the spring /seep inventory are included below. The locations of the streams, <br />springs /seeps, and surface water monitoring sites are shown on Map 2.04.7 -M1, Hydrology. A <br />summary of surface water monitoring intervals is presented in Table 2.04.7 -T5. Section 2.04.8, <br />Climatological Information, discusses the climatology of the PSCM permit area and adjacent areas. <br />Midterm Review 2.04 -60 Revision 04/2013 <br />