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Photos: Wind farm rises up from former coal mine

CNET News reporter Daniel Terdiman visits the Glenrock Wind Farm, a project built on the site of a former coal mine, on Road Trip 2009.

CNET Reviews staff
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1 of 19 Daniel Terdiman/CNET

Turbines in line

Wind turbines stand in a graceful line at the Glenrock Wind Farm, which is run by Rocky Mountain Power, a division of PacifiCorp. Consisting of 158 turbines that each produce 1.5 megawatts of power, the farm is capable of turning out 237 megawatts, which is enough power for about 66,800 residential customers in a year.

While the wind farm itself is notable for its having been built in 2008 and 2009, and thus using the very latest turbine technology from General Electric, it is likely to be better known because of where it is. For decades, the site was the home of the Dave Johnston Mine, a highly productive coal mine, also run by Rocky Mountain Power.

But in 1999, reclamation efforts began on the mine, and in 2000 it produced its last coal. And until 2005, the land was the site of a massive cleanup initiative with the goal of returning the land to the way it was--or at least as close as possible.

Because Rocky Mountain Power already owned the land, and because of its close proximity to existing transmission lines, as well as the strength of the wind in the area, the site was chosen to house the Glenrock, Rolling Hills, and Glenrock III wind farms, which collectively are called the Glenrock Wind Farm.

CNET News reporter Daniel Terdiman visited the site as part of Road Trip 2009.

Click here for the entire Road Trip 2009 package.
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2 of 19 Daniel Terdiman/CNET

The coal mine

A photo of an aerial view of the former Dave Johnston mine, which was 9 miles long. It operated from 1958 until 2000 and produced 104 million tons of coal.

As part of the reclamation project, miles of land were reseeded with native vegetation, all in an effort to return the landscape to its pre-mining appearance, according to Rocky Mountain Power. More than 85 million yards of earth were moved to accomplish the feat.

Click here for the entire Road Trip 2009 package.
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3 of 19 Rocky Mountain Power

Reseeding

During the reclamation project, the entire 4,700 acres where mining operations took place were reseeded with native vegetation. While this picture shows barren hillsides, the property is now covered in 21 different varieties of vegetation, including warm season grasses, cold season grasses, shrubs and more.

Click here for the entire Road Trip 2009 package.
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4 of 19 Rocky Mountain Power

Blade on the ground

This image, taken during the development of the wind farm, shows one turbine's huge blades, each arm of which is 125-feet long, resting on the ground, awaiting a crane to lift it and install it.

Click here for the entire Road Trip 2009 package.
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5 of 19 Rocky Mountain Power

'Stop sign'

A "stop sign" like this was installed underneath each of the 158 turbines. Because the wind farm property was formerly a coal mine, the land is not as compacted as it would have been otherwise. That's why these huge concrete bases, each weighing 1.6 million pounds, are a favorite way of balancing the turbines and ensuring they don't topple in the wind.

Click here for the entire Road Trip 2009 package.
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6 of 19 Rocky Mountain Power

Field of towers

A series of wind turbine towers, each absent its blades, in a picture from the development period of the Glenrock Wind Farm.

Click here for the entire Road Trip 2009 package.
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7 of 19 Rocky Mountain Power

Lifting the blades

A huge crane lifts one of the sets of blades, each arm of which is 125 feet long.

Click here for the entire Road Trip 2009 package.
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8 of 19 Daniel Terdiman/CNET

The finished product

Just one section of the 158-turbine Glenrock Wind Farm, as it looks today. One notable achievement is that the former coal mine is almost impossible to see. If you didn't know it was there, you would have no idea.

Click here for the entire Road Trip 2009 package.
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9 of 19 Daniel Terdiman/CNET

Looking straight up

A look straight up one of the turbines. All told, it is 340-feet high when the blade tips are up.

Click here for the entire Road Trip 2009 package.
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10 of 19 Daniel Terdiman/CNET

Coal mine sign

A legacy sign from the days when the property was a coal mine. Today, the reclamation of the mine is considered done, though the land must be examined every year until 2017 to ensure that everything is the way it's supposed to be.

Click here for the entire Road Trip 2009 package.
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11 of 19 Daniel Terdiman/CNET

Antelope running

One thing that hasn't changed about the former Dave Johnston Mine site--now the Glenrock Wind Farm--is that it is still heavily populated by pronghorned antelope, seen here running across the property.

Click here for the entire Road Trip 2009 package.
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12 of 19 Daniel Terdiman/CNET

Antelope in profile

Here, several pronghorned antelope are seen with the tops of two turbines in the background.

Click here for the entire Road Trip 2009 package.
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13 of 19 Daniel Terdiman/CNET

Turbine door

Each turbine has one of these doors, behind which is its electronics and other controls.

Click here for the entire Road Trip 2009 package.
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14 of 19 Daniel Terdiman/CNET

Reclamation

One of the major goals of the reclamation project was to return the land as close as possible to what it was like before the coal mine opened. This is a look out at the land, where it is almost impossible to tell that the mine was ever there.

Click here for the entire Road Trip 2009 package.
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15 of 19 Daniel Terdiman/CNET

'Rabbitat'

Throughout the property, these rock piles--complete with native grasses--can be found. They are little springs and hiding places for rabbits, foxes, ground squirrels and other small animals that roam the wind farm property. They were installed as part of the reclamation project.

Click here for the entire Road Trip 2009 package.
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16 of 19 Daniel Terdiman/CNET

Pronghorn

A pronghorn antelope buck stands firm, guarding what it considers to be its territory.

Click here for the entire Road Trip 2009 package.
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17 of 19 Daniel Terdiman/CNET

Giant shadow

The giant shadow cast by one of the huge wind turbines.

Click here for the entire Road Trip 2009 package.
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18 of 19 Rocky Mountain Power

Looking up inside

A view up inside one of the turbines. They are so large that staring up at them from the outside can quickly give you vertigo.

Click here for the entire Road Trip 2009 package.
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19 of 19 Daniel Terdiman/CNET

Wind farm on the rolling hills

Wyoming is becoming a major location for wind farms, partly because of the strength of the wind, and also because of having so much wide open land and existing transmission lines. The day after CNET News reporter Daniel Terdiman visited the Glenrock Wind Farm, the local newspaper featured a front-page headline about a new, large-scale wind farm that will be installed nearby.

Click here for the entire Road Trip 2009 package.

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