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<br />EXHIBIT I -SOILS INFORMATION <br /> <br />The U.S. Department of Agriculture, Natural Resource Conservation Service <br />(formerly Soil Conservation Service), Fort Collins Field Office, has mapped three <br />soil types on the property, as shown on Exhibit I and described below: <br />• Caruso clay loam, <br />• Table Mountain loam, and <br />• Loveland clay loam. <br />Caruso Clay Loam, 0 to 1 Percent Slope <br />This level soil is on low terraces and bottom lands. The Caruso series consists <br />of deep, somewhat poorly drained soils that formed in mixed alluvium. Typically, <br />the surface layer is a clay loam about 11 inches thick. The underlying material to <br />a depth of 44 inches is stratified clay loam, silty clay loam, fine sandy loam, and <br />loamy fine sand. Sand and gravel extends to 60 inches or more. Permeability is <br />moderately slow above a depth of about 25 inches and moderately rapid or rapid <br />below that depth. The available water capacity is medium to high. Runoff is <br />slow, and the hazard of erosion is slight. <br />Table Mountain Loam, 0 to 1 Percent Slopes <br />This level soil is on low terraces and bottom lands. These soils are on low <br />terraces and flood plains. The Table Mountain series consists of deep, well <br />drained soils that formed in alluvium. Typically, the surface layer is loam about <br />36 inches thick. The upper portion of the underlying material is a fine sandy loam <br />about 10 inches thick and lower part is a fine sandy loam about 5 inches thick. <br />38 <br />