Oklahoma Code § 45-742.2

Title 45. Mines And Mining: Definitions
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As used in this act:
1.  "Acid drainage" means water with a pH of less than 6.0
Standard Units and in which total acidity exceeds total alkalinity,
discharged from active, inactive, or abandoned mines and from areas
affected by surface coal mining and reclamation operations.
2.  "Acid-forming materials" means earth materials that contain
sulfide minerals or other materials which, if exposed to air, water,
or weathering processes, will result in the formation of acids that
may create acid drainage.
3.  "Adjacent area" means land located outside the affected
area, permit area, or mine plan area, depending on the context in
which "adjacent area" is used, where air, surface or ground water,
fish, wildlife, vegetation or other resources protected by this act

may be adversely impacted by surface coal mining and reclamation
operations.
4.  "Affected area" means, with respect to surface mining
activities, any land or water upon or in which those activities are
conducted or located.  With respect to underground mining
activities, "affected area" means any water or surface land upon or
in which those activities are conducted or located, and land or
water which is located above underground mine workings.
5.  "Approximate original contour" means that surface
configuration achieved by backfilling and grading of the mined areas
so that the reclaimed area, including any terracing or access roads,
closely resembles the general surface configuration of the land
prior to mining and blends into and complements the drainage pattern
of the surrounding terrain, with all highwalls, spoil piles and coal
refuse piles eliminated.  Water impoundments may be permitted where
the regulatory authority determines that they are in compliance with
Section 745.18 of this title and applicable rules and regulations.
6.  "Aquifer" means a zone, stratum, or group of strata confined
or unconfined, including perched conditions, that can store and
transmit water in sufficient quantities for a specific use.
7.  "Auger mining" means a method of mining coal at a cliff or
highwall by drilling holes laterally into an exposed coal seam from
the highwall and transporting the coal along an auger bit to the
surface.
8.  "Box cut" means the first open cut in strip mining which
results in the placing of overburden on unmined land adjacent to the
initial pit and outside the area to be mined.
9.  "Coal exploration" means the gathering of surface or
subsurface geologic, physical, or chemical data by mapping,
trenching, drilling, geophysical or other techniques necessary to
determine the quality and quantity of overburden and coal of an area
and the gathering of environmental data to establish the conditions
of the area beginning before surface coal mining and reclamation
operations.
10.  "Coal processing plant" means a collection of facilities
where run-of-the-mine coal is prepared for market by chemical or
physical processing, and separated from its impurities.  The
processing plant may consist of, but not be limited to, the
following support facilities:  loading facilities; storage and
stockpile facilities; shed, shops and other buildings; water
treatment and water storage facilities; settling basins and
impoundments; coal processing and other waste disposal areas; roads,
railroads and other transport facilities; and utilities.
11.  "Consolidated material" means material of sufficient
hardness or ability to resist weathering and to inhibit erosion or
sloughing.

12.  "Department" means the office of the Chief Mine Inspector,
including all employees, agents, deputies, and representatives of
the Department, herein called the Department of Mines and Mining, or
such department, bureau or commission as may lawfully succeed to the
powers and duties of such department, having primary responsibility
for administering all titles of the Surface Mining Law.
13.  "Director" means the Chief Mine Inspector of the State of
Oklahoma or such officer, bureau or commission as may lawfully
succeed to the powers and duties of such Chief Mine Inspector or
such employee, agent, deputy or representative of the Chief Mine
Inspector as shall be designated by the Chief Mine Inspector to
perform any actions required by this act.
14.  "Disturbed area" means an area where vegetation, topsoil,
or overburden is removed by surface coal mining operations or upon
which topsoil, spoil, coal processing waste or noncoal waste is
placed.  Those areas are "disturbed" until reclamation of those
areas is complete and the bond or other assurance of performance is
released.
15.  "Diversion" means a channel, embankment, or other manmade
structure constructed for the purpose of diverting the flow of water
from one area to another:
a. Permanent diversion means a diversion remaining after
surface coal mining and reclamation are completed and
which has been approved for retention by the
Department and other appropriate state and federal
agencies,
b. Temporary diversion means a diversion which is used
during coal exploration or surface coal mining and
reclamation operations, and not approved by the
Department to remain after reclamation as part of the
approved postmining land use.
16.  "Ephemeral stream" means a stream which flows only in
direct response to precipitation in the immediate watershed or in
response to the melting of snow and ice, and which has a channel
bottom that is always above the local water table.
17.  "Ground water" means subsurface water that fills available
openings in rock or soil materials such that they may be considered
water-saturated.
18.  "Head-of-hollow fill" means a fill structure consisting of
any material, other than coal processing waste and organic material,
placed in the uppermost reaches of a hollow where side slopes of the
existing hollow measured at the steepest point are greater than
twenty (20) degrees or the average slope of the profile of the
hollow from the toe of the fill to the top of the fill is greater
than ten (10) degrees.  In fills with less than two hundred fifty
thousand (250,000) cubic yards of material, associated with contour
mining, the top surface of the fill will be at the elevation of the

coal seam.  In all other head-of-hollow fills, the top surface of
the fill, when completed, is at approximately the same elevation as
the adjacent ridge line, and no significant area of natural drainage
occurs above the fill draining into the fill area.
19.  "Highwall" means the face of exposed overburden and coal in
an open cut of a surface or for entry to an underground coal mine.
20.  "Hydrologic balance" means the relationship between the
quality and quantity of inflow to, outflow from and storage in a
hydrologic unit such as a drainage basin, aquifer, soil zone, lake,
or reservoir.  It encompasses the quantity and quality relationships
between precipitation, runoff, evaporation, and the change in ground
and surface water storage.
21.  "Hydrologic regime" means the entire state of water
movement in a given area.  It is a function of the climate, and
includes the phenomena by which water first occurs as atmospheric
water vapor, passes into a liquid or solid form and falls as
precipitation, moves along or into the ground surface, and returns
to the atmosphere as vapor by means of evaporation and
transpiration.
22.  "Imminent danger to the health and safety of the public"
means the existence of any condition or practice, or any violation
of a permit or other requirements of this act in a surface coal
mining and reclamation operation, which condition, practice, or
violation could reasonably be expected to cause substantial physical
harm to persons outside the permit area before such condition,
practice, or violation can be abated.  A reasonable expectation of
death or serious injury before abatement exists if a rational
person, subjected to the same condition or practice giving rise to
the peril, would not expose oneself to the danger during the time
necessary for abatement.
23.  "Impoundment" means a closed basin, naturally formed or
artificially built, which is dammed or excavated for the retention
of water, sediment, or waste.
24.  "In situ processes" means activities conducted on the
surface or underground in connection with in-place distillation,
retorting, leaching, or other chemical or physical processing of
coal, to include, but not be limited to, in situ gasification, in
situ leaching, slurry mining, solution mining, bore hole mining and
fluid recovery mining.
25.  "Intermittent stream" means a stream or reach of a stream
that drains a watershed of at least one (1) square mile, or a stream
or reach of a stream that is below the local water table for at
least some part of the year, and obtains its flow from both surface
runoff and ground water discharge.
26.  "Operator" means any person, partnership, firm or
corporation engaged in coal mining who removes or intends to remove

more than two hundred fifty (250) tons from the earth within twelve
(12) consecutive months in any one location.
27.  "Other minerals" means clay, stone, sand, gravel,
metalliferous and nonmetalliferous ores, and any other solid
material or substances of commercial value excavated in solid form
from natural deposits on or in the earth, exclusive of coal and
those minerals which occur naturally in liquid or gaseous form.
28.  "Overburden" means all of the earth and other materials,
excluding topsoil, which lie above natural deposits of coal and
other minerals, and also means such earth and other materials
disturbed from their natural state in the process of surface mining.
29.  "Peak" means an upward projecting point of overburden
created in the surface mining process.
30.  "Perennial stream" means a stream or part of a stream that
flows continuously during all of the calendar year as a result of
groundwater discharge or surface runoff.
31.  "Performance bond" means the indemnity instrument in a sum
certain, supported by a surety's guarantee, pledge of collateral or
other acceptable contractual guarantee, by which the permit
applicant assures faithful performance of all the applicable permit
requirements of this act and the rules and regulations promulgated
thereunder.
32.  "Permit" means a permit to conduct surface coal mining and
reclamation operations issued by the Department pursuant to state
law.
33.  "Permit area" means the area, including all natural and
human resources, included within the boundaries specified in a
permit, whether or not the areas will be impacted by surface coal
mining and reclamation operations, which are designated on the
approved maps submitted by the applicant with his permit application
and covered by the performance and reclamation bonds as required.
34.  "Permittee" means a person holding a "permit" to conduct
surface coal mining and reclamation operations issued by the
Department pursuant to state law.
35.  "Pit" means a tract of land from which overburden or
minerals have been or are being removed in the process of surface
mining.
36.  "Prime farmland" means lands which meet the criteria of the
Department, which shall prescribe criteria at least as stringent as
criteria prescribed by the United States Secretary of Agriculture on
the basis of such factors as moisture availability, temperature
regime, chemical balance, permeability, surface layer composition,
susceptibility to flooding, and erosion characteristics, and which
historically have been used for intensive agricultural purposes.
37.  "Reclamation" means, through the process of backfilling,
regrading, topsoil replacement, reutilization, and revegetation
activities, the bringing back of land to its approximate original

contours and configuration, and resulting in an equal or better land
use category, and shall be consistent with the existing surrounding
environment.
38.  "Reference areas" means land units of varying size and
shape identified and maintained under appropriate management for the
purpose of measuring ground cover, productivity and species
diversity that are produced naturally or by crop production methods
approved by the Department. Reference areas must be representative
of geology, soils, slope, aspect and vegetation in the permit area.
39.  "Refuse" means all waste material directly connected with
the production, cleaning or preparation of coal or other minerals
which have been mined by either underground or surface mining
method.
40.  "Regulatory authority" means the Department of Mines and
Mining.
41.  "Ridge" means a lengthened elevation of overburden created
in the surface mining process.
42.  "Significant, imminent environmental harm to land, air or
water resources" is determined as follows:
a. An environmental harm is any adverse impact on land,
air, or water resources, including but not limited to,
plant and animal life,
b. An environmental harm is imminent if a condition,
practice or violation exists which:
(1) is causing such harm or,
(2) may reasonably be expected to cause such harm at
any time before the end of the reasonable
abatement time that would be set under Section
775 of this title,
c. An environmental harm is significant if that harm is
appreciable and not immediately reparable.
43.  "Slope" means average inclination of a surface, measured
from the horizontal; normally expressed as a unit of vertical
distance to a given number of units of horizontal distance (e.g.,
one unit vertical (1v) to five units horizontal (5h) = 11.3
degrees).
44.  "Soil horizons" means contrasting layers of soil lying one
below the other, parallel or near parallel to the land surface.
Soil horizons are differentiated on the basis of field
characteristics and laboratory data.  The three (3) major soil
horizons are:
a. "A horizon".  The uppermost layer in the soil profile
often called the surface soil.  It is the part of the
soil in which organic matter is most abundant and
where leaching of soluble or suspended particles is
the greatest,

b. "B horizon".  The layer immediately beneath the A
horizon and often called the subsoil.  This middle
layer commonly contains more clay, iron or aluminum
than the A or C horizons, and
c. "C horizon".  The deepest layer of the soil profile.
It consists of loose material or weathered rock that
is relatively unaffected by biologic activity.
45.  "Spoil" means displaced overburden.
46.  "Strip mining" means those mining operations carried out by
removing the overburden lying above natural deposits of coal and
other minerals, and mining directly from such natural deposits
thereby exposed, but excludes auger mining, quarrying, dredging,
pumping or the use of hydraulic methods.
47.  "Substantially disturb" means, for purposes of coal
exploration, to significantly impact upon land, air or water
resources by such activities as blasting, mechanical excavation of
land, drilling or altering coal or water exploratory holes or wells,
construction or creation of roads and other access routes, and the
placement of structures, excavated earth or other debris upon the
surface of land.
48.  "Surface coal mining and reclamation operations" means
surface mining operations and all activities necessary and incident
to the reclamation of such operations.
49.  "Surface coal mining operations" means:
a. Activities conducted on the surface of lands in
connection with a surface coal mine or surface
operations and surface impacts incident to an
underground coal mine.  Such activities include
excavation for the purpose of obtaining coal,
including such common methods as contour, strip,
auger, mountaintop removal, box cut, open pit, and
area mining, the uses of explosives and blasting, in
situ distillation or retorting, leaching or other
chemical or physical processing, and the cleaning,
concentrating, or other processing or preparation,
loading of coal at or near the mine site.  Such
activities do not include the extraction of coal
incidental to the extraction of other minerals where
coal does not exceed sixteen and two-thirds percent
(16 2/3%) of the tonnage of minerals removed for the
purposes of commercial use or sale or coal
exploration, subject to Section 745.11 of this title,
and
b. The areas upon which such activities occur or where
such activities disturb the natural land surface.
Such areas shall also include any adjacent land, the
use of which is incidental to any such activities, all

lands affected by the construction of new roads or
improvement or use of existing roads to gain access to
the site of such activities and for haulage and
excavations, workings, impoundments, dams, ventilation
shafts, entryways, refuse banks, dumps, stockpiles,
overburden piles, spoil banks, culm banks, tailings,
holes or depressions, repair areas, storage areas,
processing areas, shipping areas and other areas upon
which are sited structures, facilities, or other
property or materials on the surface, resulting from
or incident to such activities.
50.  "Surface water" means water, either flowing or standing, on
the surface of the earth.
51.  "Topsoil" means the "A" soil horizon, which is the
uppermost layer of the three (3) major soil horizons.
52.  "Underground mining activities" means a combination of:
a. Surface operations incident to underground extraction
of coal or in situ processing, such as construction,
use, maintenance, and reclamation of roads, above-
ground repair areas, storage areas, processing areas,
shipping areas, areas upon which are sited support
facilities including hoist and ventilating ducts,
areas utilized for the disposal and storage of waste,
and areas on which materials incident to underground
mining operations are placed, and
b. Underground operations such as underground
construction, operation, and reclamation of shafts,
adits, underground support facilities, in situ
processing, and underground mining, hauling, storage,
and blasting, and
c. The areas in which activities enumerated above occur
or where such activities disturb the natural land
surface.
53.  "Unwarranted failure to comply" means the failure of a
permittee to prevent the occurrence of any violation of his permit
or any requirement of this act due to indifference, lack of
diligence, or lack of reasonable care, or the failure to abate any
violation of such permit or the act due to indifference, lack of
diligence, or lack of reasonable care.
54.  "Water table" means the upper surface of a zone of
saturation, where the body of ground water is not confined by an
overlying impermeable zone.

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