Laserfiche WebLink
<br />STATE OF COLC III_IIIIIIIIIIIIIIII <br />DIVISION OF MINERALS AND GEOLOGY <br />Depanmem o! Natural Resources <br />1113 Sherman SL, Room ?15 II~ <br />Denver, Colorado BO]03 <br />Phnne: 1.3011 Afifi-3567 <br />FAX 130 i) B1?-810fi <br />DEPARTMENT OF <br />INTERNAL MEMO ~ otUr~~c S <br />Ruy Romer <br />TO: David Berry ~~~~~G ~/ 26 March 1998 covemnr <br />,~(I ,~//G' Tames 5 Lochhead <br />~ Ececunve Dnecror <br />FROM: Jim Burnell ~ Michael B Long <br />Drvisian Director <br />SUBJ: Mountain oat Water Report <br />Several main points were made in the Mayo report to Mountain Coal Company and in the Mayo <br />presentation to the CDMG on 21 January 1998 as evidence that water issuing from the spring at <br />the Edwazds Portal is not the same water that was Bumped upgradient from the spring by <br />Mountain Coal Company. In the verbal presentation, it appeazed to me that Dr Mayo's main <br />lines of evidence involved the major element chemistry of the waters, particulazly the sodium ion <br />content of the two waters, and the cazbon isotope composition of Edwards Portal spring vs <br />Bumped waters. We conclude that these lines of evidence do not show that the spring water is not <br />related to the sump water. <br />Sodium Concentrations <br />The water in the NW panels sump was derived from mine inflow from several faults intersected <br />during mining operations. One of the lines of azgument used to show that the Edwazds Portal <br />spring water is not the same water as Bumped water, is the differences in the Na-ion content of <br />the waters from the spring and those from the various faults. The contention is that water <br />emanating from the Edwazds Portal contains significantly less Na' than the fault waters and a <br />mechanism to reduce that Na could not have operated to affect the water between the time and <br />location of the two points of analysis. <br />(1) There really isn't much difference in the sodium contents. <br />It is the Division's contention that the Na-content of the Edwards Portal Spring water is not <br />considerably less than that of the fault waters. Individual analyses of"in-mine fault samples" <br />yield values of Na that range from 717 mg/L to 1175 mg/L. (The range can be expressed in <br />millequivalents as 31.2 to 51.1 meq/L.) That compares to a single analysis from the Edwards <br />portal spring of 755 mg/L (32.8 meq/L), a value at the low end, but still within the range , <br />represented in the fault waters. The sodium content of portal spring water agrees completely <br />with B East Mains fault water. <br />So the first rebuttal of the sodium argument is simply that the sodium content isn't different. <br />