Laserfiche WebLink
PHILLIPS COUNTY, COLORADO <br />soil, generally on knobs, or in sags where the soil material <br />],as been reworked considerably and a thin mantle of loess <br />deposited. <br />The soils in this complex take in water well and have <br />moderate to high available water holding capacity. Chisel- <br />ing can be used to break up plowpans that form if the <br />souls are tilled when wet.. In it few spots, flat fragments of <br />limestone as much as 3 to 12 inches in diameter cover the <br />surface. <br />These soils are suitable for cultivation or as rangeland. <br />.dearly all of the acreage is cultivated. In dryfarmed fields <br />AN-inter small grains, sorghums, and similar crops grow <br />Ayell. Erosion can be controlled if stubble-mulch tillage is <br />used and these soils are summer fallowed after crops are <br />l :irvested. In some fields emergency tillage is needed for <br />reducing soil blowing. In addition to small grains and <br />Q(ort hums, alfalfa, corn, and sugar beets are suited in <br />i rrigat.ed areas. In these areas crop residue and manure <br />should be worked into the soil. Irrigated crops respond if <br />fertilizer is applied. <br />On rangeland blue grama, western wheat•grass, little <br />1) tnt,stem, and bufl'alogra.ss grow well. These native grasses <br /><•.:in be reseeded if the soil is moist and well covered with <br />litter. Proper range use can be obtained by locating fences, <br />WAter, and salt so that animals ;raze the entire area. Capa- <br />bility units IIIs-2 (dryland) and IIe-2 (irrigated) ; <br />E,o,aay Plains range site; windbreak suitability group 1. <br />Wages-Campus-Weld loams, 3 to 5 percent slopes <br />WcQ occur mostly in the western part of the county. They <br />occupy old, high land surfaces that have been covered with <br />\6uilblown silt, These areas generally occupy convex <br />i idges that trend southeastward. Some areas of Wares and <br />(`ai npus soils are on side slopes adjacent to nearly level <br />.leas of Dawes loam, but the Weld soil does not occur <br />its. these areas. <br />Wages soil makes up about 50 percent of the complex; <br />t'itm us soil, 25 percent; and Weld soil, 1:5 percent. Wages <br />:iiid Campus soils are on the slopes, and the Weld soil is on <br />Ht(,, narrow, convex ridgetops. These soils are so closely <br />.ftssociated that it is not practical to map them separately. <br />Erich kind of soil has a profile similar to the one described <br />for its series. <br />Included in mapping were small areas of Platner soils <br />that occupy the toe slopes of the ridges. Also included were <br />.i, few small spots of Canyon soils near spots where lime- <br />Aone crops out. The limestone is a liazard to farm machin- <br />ery. Also occurring were a few small areas having slopes of <br />io 0 percent. <br />These soils take in water moderately well. Their avail- <br />-Lble water holding capacity is nnoder,& to high. Because <br />?lol,es ire gentle, runoff is considerable (luring heavy <br />rains, which causes small rills to form. Plowpans tend to <br />form in the soils if they are tilled when wet. <br />`oils in this complex are suitable for limited cultivation <br />or :-is rangeland. Nearly all the acreage is cultivated. A <br />sitit.able practice in dryfarined fields is stubble-mulch till- <br />for controlling erosion and maintaining tilth and fer- <br />tility. Tilth and fertility are also maintained by working <br />crop residue into the soil, emergency tillage, and construct- <br />ing terraces on the longer slopes. These practices also con- <br />. rve moisture. In the irrigated areas, crops respond to <br />applications of fertilizer. <br />On rangeland grasses grow well if fences, water, and salt <br />:ire properly placed so that livestock graze the entire range. <br />23 <br />Seedlings emerge quickly if the range is reseeded when the <br />soil is moist and has a (yood cover of litter. Then, grazing <br />should be deferred until the young plants are well estab- <br />lished. Capability units IVe-1 (dryland) and IIIe-5 (ir- <br />rigated) ; Loamy Plains range site; windbreak suitability <br />group 1. <br />Wages-Eckley-Dix complex, 5 to 25 percent slopes <br />(WeE) occupies areas along intermittent dramageways, <br />principally Frenchman and Patent Creeks. These soils are <br />so intermingled that it is not practical to map them <br />separately. <br />Included with these soils in mapping were nearly level <br />to moderately sloping soils on stream terraces and chan- <br />nel bottoms. The channel bottoms are shown on the soil <br />map by a symbol for drainage. Also included were small <br />areas where the soil is shallow over gravel and calcareous <br />throughout. <br />About 60 percent of this complex is Wages soils, 1S per- <br />cent is Eckley soils, and 12 percent is Dix soils. Each kind <br />of soil has the profile described as typical for its series. The <br />rest of the complex consists of areas of Platner and Asca- <br />lon soils. In hardland or sandy- land areas, the Ascalon <br />soils occur on the south banks of the streams and Platner <br />soils are at the upper edges of side slopes. <br />These soils take water at a moderate. to rapid rate. Where <br />they are shallow, their capacity to hold water is limited. <br />If rails are heavy, runoff is considerable and causes rill <br />erosion. Also, extra water fronn runoff frequently concen- <br />trates and floods the Dix soils. Erosion control dams could <br />be built to control this water. <br />The complex is not suitable for cultivation, mainly be- <br />cause it is erodible, shallow, and sloping to steep. The <br />areas should be seeded with native grasses. In the more <br />accessible areas, overgrazing is prevented by placing water, <br />fences, and salt so that the livestock graze the entire range. <br />Although reseeding may be difficult in some eroded or over- <br />grazed areas, seeds germinate quickly if the soil is moist <br />and covered with litter. Young plants should not be grazed <br />until they are -well established. Capability unit VIe-3 <br />(dryland) ; Wages soils are in Loamy- Plains range site and <br />windbreak suitability group 1; Eckley soils are in Gravel <br />Breaks range site and windbreak suitability group 3; and <br />Dix soils are in Gravel Breaks range site and windbreak <br />suitability group 2. <br />Weld Series <br />The Weld series consists of deep, well-drained, loamy <br />soils that are nearly level to gently sloping. These soils are <br />in the western and extreme northeastern parts of the <br />county (fig. . 9). They formed in loamy eolian, or loessal, <br />materials. In a typical profile the surface layer is about <br />6 inches thick. It is grayish-brown loam in the upper part <br />and dark gravish-brown loam in the lower part. <br />The subsoil is about 10 inches thick and noncalcareous. <br />The tipper part is very hard, Clark gray ish-brown clay, <br />and the lower part is hard, dark grayish-brown very fine <br />sandy loam. <br />The underlying material is very pale brown loamy ma- <br />terial that contains many fragments of limestone as much <br />as 1 inch in diameter. <br />Because the surface layer of the Weld soils is a thin <br />deposit of loam overlying a very slowly permeable sub- <br />soil, runoff is rapid on moderately sloping areas. Hard-