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Large areas of the southern California desert ecosystem have been negatively affected by off-highway vehicle use, overgrazing by domestic livestock, agriculture, urbanization, construction of roads and utility corridors, air pollution, military training exercises, and other activities.

This technical memorandum presents predictive results from the Resolution Copper (RC) groundwater flow model developed by WSP in support of the EIS for the Resolution Copper Mine plan and land exchange.

Meeting notes from Biology Working Group August 27, 2018

The purpose of this process memorandum is to describe additional supporting resource information in detail. The Livestock and Grazing section of Chapter 3 of the EIS includes brief summaries of the information contained in this process memorandum.

Human activities subject many aquatic habitats to significant alterations m natural cycles of illumination. More than half of the world's human population lives within 100 km of an ocean, and most other major human developments are near rivers or lakes.

Topics presented in this manual include procedures for predicting and assessing noise and vibration impacts of proposed transit projects for different stages of project development and different levels of analysis.

The Safety standard D5 - Management of tailings and water storage facilities (the standard) applies to all Rio Tinto projects, business units and managed operations, including new acquisitions. It covers all development phases from planning, design through construction, operation, closure and, post-closure where applicable.

The exact time and place of the original introduction of sulfur cinquefoil to North America is not known. The 1st collection of sulfur cinquefoil in North America was made sometime before 1900 in Ontario.

This paper summarizes a review of tailings dam incidents, and examines the key constituents contributing to the causes and consequences of these incidents. Comparisons are drawn with water-storage dams, and conclusions are presented on reducing the potential for future incidents.

Subsidence is a slow and gradual process that is predicted, closely monitored and controlled. Mining will start from a point away from Apache Leap, and after 40 years of block-cave mining, projections are that the subsidence zone will be at its deepest (1,100 feet) but will still be more than 1,100 feet from the Leap after mining has ceased.