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2023-09-06_PERMIT FILE - M2023032 (5)
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2023-09-06_PERMIT FILE - M2023032 (5)
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Last modified
9/6/2023 10:04:01 AM
Creation date
8/28/2023 9:27:22 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
DRMS Permit Index
Permit No
M2023032
IBM Index Class Name
Permit File
Doc Date
9/6/2023
Doc Name Note
Exhibit I - Soils Information
Doc Name
Application
From
Martin Marietta Materials, Inc.
To
DRMS
Email Name
ANM
JLE
Media Type
D
Archive
No
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Custom Soil Resource Report <br /> Culmination of the mean annual increment(CMAI) <br /> The average annual increase per acre in the volume of a stand. Computed by <br /> dividing the total volume of the stand by its age. As the stand increases in age, <br /> the mean annual increment continues to increase until mortality begins to <br /> reduce the rate of increase. The point where the stand reaches its maximum <br /> annual rate of growth is called the culmination of the mean annual increment. <br /> Cutbanks cave <br /> The walls of excavations tend to cave in or slough. <br /> Decreasers <br /> The most heavily grazed climax range plants. Because they are the most <br /> palatable, they are the first to be destroyed by overgrazing. <br /> Deferred grazing <br /> Postponing grazing or resting grazing land for a prescribed period. <br /> Delta <br /> A body of alluvium having a surface that is fan shaped and nearly flat; <br /> deposited at or near the mouth of a river or stream where it enters a body of <br /> relatively quiet water, generally a sea or lake. <br /> Dense layer <br /> A very firm, massive layer that has a bulk density of more than 1.8 grams per <br /> cubic centimeter. Such a layer affects the ease of digging and can affect filling <br /> and compacting. <br /> Depression, closed (map symbol) <br /> A shallow, saucer-shaped area that is slightly lower on the landscape than the <br /> surrounding area and that does not have a natural outlet for surface drainage. <br /> Depth, soil <br /> Generally, the thickness of the soil over bedrock. Very deep soils are more than <br /> 60 inches deep over bedrock; deep soils, 40 to 60 inches; moderately deep, 20 <br /> to 40 inches; shallow, 10 to 20 inches; and very shallow, less than 10 inches. <br /> Desert pavement <br /> A natural, residual concentration or layer of wind-polished, closely packed <br /> gravel, boulders, and other rock fragments mantling a desert surface. It forms <br /> where wind action and sheetwash have removed all smaller particles or where <br /> rock fragments have migrated upward through sediments to the surface. It <br /> typically protects the finer grained underlying material from further erosion. <br /> Diatomaceous earth <br /> A geologic deposit of fine, grayish siliceous material composed chiefly or <br /> entirely of the remains of diatoms. <br /> 40 <br />
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