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2013-06-18_REVISION - M1987164 (9)
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2013-06-18_REVISION - M1987164 (9)
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Entry Properties
Last modified
6/15/2021 3:13:11 PM
Creation date
6/19/2013 3:48:23 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
DRMS Permit Index
Permit No
M1987164
IBM Index Class Name
REVISION
Doc Date
6/18/2013
Doc Name
AM-02 APPLICATION
From
OPERATOR
To
DRMS
Type & Sequence
AM2
Email Name
DMC
GRM
Media Type
D
Archive
No
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Buckley silty clay, 12 to 25 percent slopes <br />The Buckley component occupies a small portion of the permit area. Slopes are 12 to 25 <br />percent. The landform is hills. The parent material consists of colluvium derived from <br />sandstone and shale and/or slope alluvium derived from sandstone and shale. The soil drainage <br />class is well drained. The capacity of the most limiting layer to transmit water is moderately low <br />or moderately high. The frequency of flooding is none. The maximum calcium carbonate is 15 <br />percent. The available water capacity is high (about 9.7 inches). Depth to a root restrictive layer <br />is greater than 60 inches. This component is in the R034XY296CO Claypan ecological site. <br />Nonirrigated land capability classification is 6e. Soils in this class have severe limitations that <br />make them generally unsuitable to cultivation and limit their use largely to pasture or range, <br />woodland, or wildlife food and cover. Also this soil made up of soils where the susceptibility to <br />erosion is the dominant problem or hazard in their use. Erosion susceptibility and past erosion <br />damage are the major soil factors for placing soils in this subclass. <br />Apmay sandy clay loam, 0 to 3 percent slopes <br />The Apmay component occupies a small portion of the permit area. Slopes are 0 to 3 percent. <br />The landform is flood plains. The parent material consists of mixed alluvium. The soil drainage <br />class is somewhat poorly drained. The capacity of the most limiting layer to transmit water is <br />moderately high or high. The frequency of flooding is occasional. The frequency of ponding is <br />zero. The maximum calcium carbonate is zero percent. The available water capacity is low <br />(about 3.3 inches). Depth to a root restrictive layer is 20 to 40 inches. Nonirrigated land and <br />irrigated land capability classification is 4w. Soils in class 4 have very severe limitations that <br />restrict the choice of plants, require very careful management, or both. When these soils are <br />cultivated, more careful management is required and conservation practices are more difficult to <br />apply and maintain. Soils in class 4 may be used for crops, pasture, woodland, range, or wildlife <br />food and cover. Soils in class IV may be well suited to only two or three of the common crops or <br />the harvest produced may be low in relation to inputs over a long period of time. Use for <br />cultivated crops is limited as a result of the effects of excessive wetness with continuing hazard <br />of waterlogging after drainage. In subhumid and semiarid areas, soils in class 4 may produce <br />good yields of adapted cultivated crops during years of above average rainfall; low yields during <br />Hayden Gravel Pit, May 2013 I -3 <br />
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