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t <br />No alluvial v4 <br />the alluvial ~ <br />Creek meet th~~ <br />in Section B,~ <br />Climate <br />Climatic infc <br />The region is <br />Precipitation <br />yearly precip <br />area are from <br />winds are not <br />Soils <br />Soils inform <br />in Section 2 <br />alley floors (AVF's> exist within the area to be mined. However, <br />le posits of Goodspring Creek, Wilson Creek, and lower Elkhorn <br />geomorphic and irrigation criteria of an AVF and are discussed <br />Item XVII of this document. <br />mation is found in Section 2.04.8 of the permit application. <br />characterized by a semi-arid steppe climate regime. <br />averages 18 inches per year with a significant portion of this <br />tation occurring as snowfall. Prevailing winds over the permit <br />the southwest and average eight to nine miles per hour. High <br />common, due to the protection afforded by local terrain. <br />on is found in Section B, Item IV of this document, as well as <br />.9 and Exhibit 9 of the permit application. <br />The most prevalent soils at Colowyo, the Burnette and Work Loams, are <br />mollisols of the suborder boroll, which developed on gently sloping to rolling <br />ridgetops, moderately steep sideslopes, and in gently sloping, concave narrow <br />stream valleys. Shallow, rocky soils of the order entisol occur to a limited <br />extent within the area to be disturbed on steep, south-facing slopes. <br />For the most part, the soils that developed on the gentle slopes and swales, <br />including theBurnette and Work Loams, are deep Loams and clay Loams with <br />physical and chemical properties that are well suited for revegetation. One <br />soil unit, the Campspass Fine Sandy Loam, which occupies considerable acreage <br />in the southern and western portions of the permit area, is characterized by <br />subsoils highin clay content. These soils, if salvaged and redistributed <br />directly on the regraded spoils, could hamper reclamation efforts due to the <br />high runoff, erosion hazard, slow permeability and droughty conditions <br />associated with fine textured Soils. <br />Vegetation <br />Baseline vegetation information is found in Section 2.04.10, Map 4 and <br />Exhibit 10 of the permit application. <br />Six vegetation communities and a small amount of cropland exist within the <br />Colowyo permit boundary. The major communities are sagebrush and mountain <br />shrub. Communities of minor significance include a juniper community in the <br />vicinity of Streeter Mountain, scattered aspen groves in the upper reaches of <br />Streeter and aylor Creeks, a limited riparian community along Goodspring and <br />Taylor Creeks, and a small western wheatgrass community in the southern <br />portion of the, permit area. <br />The sagebrush community occurs throughout the permit area on all elevations, <br />slopes and soils. The community has developed wherever soil moisture <br />retention and soil depth has become limiting to other vegetation communities. <br />The overstory is dominated by big sagebrush (Artemisia tridentate) and <br />-6- <br />