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<br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br /> <br />inches. Fort Collins and Olney soils have a B horizon. Typically these soils have <br />free carbonates at the surface content of coarse fragments ranges to as much as 10 <br />percent. <br /> <br />Crops yields per acre in this series are: 3 to 4 tons of hay; 20 tons of beets; and, 80 <br />to 140 bushels of corn. <br /> <br />Otero series: <br /> <br />The Otero series consists of deep, well drained soils that formed in alluvium and <br />eolian deposits. Otero soils are on plains and terraces. Slopes are 0 to 9 percent. <br />Otero soils are similarto the Kim, Nelson, Tassel, and Thedalund soils and are near <br />the Olney and Vona soils. Kim soils are more than 18 percent clay in the C horizon. <br />Nelson, Tassel, and Thedalund soils have sandstone and shale between 10 and 40 <br />inches" Olney and Vona soils have a B horizon. Typically these soils have free <br />carbonates at the surface" Content of coarse fragments ranges from 0 to 10 <br />percent. <br /> <br />Crops yields per acre in this sBries are: 3 to 5.5 tons of hay; 18 to 23 tons of beets; <br />and, 80 to 170 bushels of corn. <br /> <br />Nunn series: <br /> <br />The Nunn series consists of deep, well drained soils that formed in mixed alluvium <br />and eolian deposits" Nunn soils are on terraces, alluvial. fans, and smooth plains" <br />Slopes are 0 to 3 percent. Nunn soils are similar to the Altvan and Dacono soils <br />and are near the Colombo, Fort Collins, Haverson, and Weld soils. Altvan and <br />Dacono soils have a sand and gravel C horizon at a depth of 20 to 40 inches. <br />Colombo and Haverson soils lack a B horizon. Fort Collins soils are le:ss than 35 <br />percent clay in the B horizon. Weld soils have' an a brupt textura~ boundary <br />between the A and B horizons. <br /> <br />Crops yields per acre in this series are typically: 3.5 to 5.5 tons of hay; 20 to 24 tons <br />of beets; 2400 to 2700 pounds of dry pinto beans; and, 80 to 180 bushels of corn. <br /> <br />LAND OWNERSHIP <br /> <br />The land in the project service is primarily private farms, ranches, and some individual <br />home sites. All of the agricultural land serviced by the company is privately owned. <br /> <br />WATER RIGHTS <br /> <br />OILC has the right to store seep water and excess water from the Greeley NO.2 Canal. <br />Seeley Lake Reservoir was originally a natural lake which was enlarged in 1902. The <br /> <br />Rehabilitation of Seeley Lake Outlet - Feasibility Study <br /> <br />Page 4 <br />