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catalogued at DLNR). The specific pages being dated February 12 and 13, 1878. <br />These notes as well as others in the vicinity were used to create Registered Map 910 <br />and Registered Map 938. <br />CID�- <br />o v L -- <br />A i A _ ` . L Xy` ��IL L4 -k: <br />wk`..J, <br />t 1 <br />The impounded waters create a large pond before flowing out to sea in a steady <br />stream at the far south side of the beach. The pond supports several estuary types <br />of fish and shellfish. Common Godi fish inhabit the area near the exit into the <br />ocean. Young mullet and Aholehole swim in the deeper waters of the pond and non- <br />native Tahitian prawns are prevalent in the rocky bottom areas. During periods of <br />heavy rainfall, the river can reach flood status and the entire ili'ili beach will <br />disappear, washed into the ocean. Not long after these flood events the waves will <br />restore the berm and the puniawa pond returns to its calm and serene state. Mill <br />Beach as it appears today was not accessible to the public during the entire term of <br />sugarcane milling operations. The milling operations completely dominated both <br />the river and ocean in the mill vicinity. Anecdotal stories from the old timers that <br />worked the mill tell a story of a much more degraded beach and ocean interaction <br />with Mill waste, spent sugarcane bagasse, furnace slag and ash pushed into the river, <br />and cleaning plant wash waters depositing soil, rocks and debris into the river and <br />bay. The enactment of the EPA Clean Water Act in 1972 required the mills along the <br />Hamakua Coast including Papaikou mill to stop all dumping of bagasse and soil into <br />the ocean. The result of the Clean Water Act was the shutting down of Hilo Sugar <br />Company's Wainaku Mill and Hakalau Plantation's Mill in 1974. The Papaikou Mill <br />stayed open another two years milling all cane formerly handled at the Wainaku <br />Mill. The cane storage areas upon the subject parcel were expanded to accept this <br />doubling of material, thus today one can see large areas of concrete floors poured <br />and unloading stations constructed to handle the increased amount of cane to <br />process at Papaikou Mill. All bagasse and cane cleaning wastes were hauled by truck <br />to the fields above the mill. <br />