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Custom Soil Resource Report <br /> Map Unit Legend <br /> Map Unit Symbol Map Unit Name Acres in AOI Percent of AOI <br /> 3 Aquolls and Aquents,gravelly 274.2 33.0% <br /> substratum <br /> 10 Ellicott-Ellicott sandy-skeletal 407.0 48.9% <br /> complex,0 to 3 percent <br /> slopes,rarely flooded <br /> 21 Dacono clay loam,0 to 1 2.0 0.2% <br /> percent slopes <br /> 22 Dacono clay loam, 1 to 3 7.71 0.9% <br /> percent slopes <br /> 126 Haverson loam, 1 to 3 percent 1.8 0.2% <br /> slopes <br /> 41 Nunn clay loam,0 to 1 percent 6.3 0.8% <br /> slopes <br /> 52 Otero sandy loam,3 to 5 3.51 0.4% <br /> percent slopes <br /> 68 Ustic Torriorthents,moderately 79.4 9.6% <br /> steep <br /> 85 Water 49.9 6.0% <br /> Totals for Area of Interest 831.8 100.0% <br /> Map Unit Descriptions <br /> The map units delineated on the detailed soil maps in a soil survey represent the <br /> soils or miscellaneous areas in the survey area. The map unit descriptions, along <br /> with the maps, can be used to determine the composition and properties of a unit. <br /> A map unit delineation on a soil map represents an area dominated by one or more <br /> major kinds of soil or miscellaneous areas. A map unit is identified and named <br /> according to the taxonomic classification of the dominant soils. Within a taxonomic <br /> class there are precisely defined limits for the properties of the soils. On the <br /> landscape, however, the soils are natural phenomena, and they have the <br /> characteristic variability of all natural phenomena. Thus, the range of some <br /> observed properties may extend beyond the limits defined for a taxonomic class. <br /> Areas of soils of a single taxonomic class rarely, if ever, can be mapped without <br /> including areas of other taxonomic classes. Consequently, every map unit is made <br /> up of the soils or miscellaneous areas for which it is named and some minor <br /> components that belong to taxonomic classes other than those of the major soils. <br /> Most minor soils have properties similar to those of the dominant soil or soils in the <br /> map unit, and thus they do not affect use and management. These are called <br /> noncontrasting, or similar, components. They may or may not be mentioned in a <br /> particular map unit description. Other minor components, however, have properties <br /> and behavioral characteristics divergent enough to affect use or to require different <br /> management. These are called contrasting, or dissimilar, components. They <br /> 8 <br />