Geologic Map of IDAHO
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Introduction to Short-Season Gardening in Idaho by Stephen L
SHORT-SEASON, HIGH-ALTITUDE GARDENING BULLETIN 857 Introduction to short-season gardening in Idaho by Stephen L. Love, Kathy Noble, and Stuart Parkinson INTRODUCTION Many of us who garden in Idaho face the challenges brought on by lack of summer warmth, spring and fall frost, extreme winter cold, or desiccation from frequent wind. Growing beautiful and productive plants in the high CONTENTS desert or mountain regions of Idaho requires unique approaches and an attention to detail that are rarely discussed in popular garden guides. INTRODUCTION . 1 DEFINING THE SHORT-SEASON, HIGH-ALTITUDE This publication introduces the Short-Season/High-Altitude Gardening series ZONE . 1 specifically designed to provide effective, comprehensive ideas for gardening IDAHO’S THREE SHORT-SEASON CLIMATES . 2 where Idaho’s unique combination of extreme climate, weather, geology, and NUANCES OF MICROCLIMATE . 4 Rural vs. Urban . 4 geography presents obstacles to successful gardening. Subsequent publications Slope and Aspect . 4 provide details on managing specific kinds of plants in the short-season garden. Local Weather Patterns . 4 DEFINING THE SHORT-SEASON, HIGH-ALTITUDE ZONE The Short-Season/High-Altitude Gardening series is for gardeners living within Idaho’s harshest climates, specifically those rated USDA hardiness YOU ARE A SHORT-SEASON, HIGH-ALTITUDE GARDENER IF: zone 4 or colder, situated at an elevation above 4,500 feet, or with a frost- free period of fewer than 110 days. Although many locales throughout the You live in Idaho at an elevation above 4,500 feet, OR state experience these conditions, they are most common in the upper Snake Your USDA hardiness zone is 4 or lower, OR River Valley, the southeastern and southern highlands, the high deserts north You have a frost-free growing season of 110 days or less of the Snake River, the central mountains, and the coldest valley and moun- tain locations in the northern panhandle. -
See Grantees
Organization Name Program Area County Amount Funded East region Aid for Friends Housing and Assistance Bannock $20,000.00 Aid for Friends Housing and Assistance Bannock $14,285.00 Bear Lake Healthcare Foundation Health Bear Lake $17,500.00 Bingham County Senior Center Food and Basic Needs Bingham $15,000.00 Bingham Crisis Center Domestic Violence Bingham $5,000.00 Bingham Crisis Center Domestic Violence Bingham $5,415.00 Center for Hope Health Bonneville $1,000.00 Challis Senior Citizens Inc Food and Basic Needs Custer $1,150.00 Club, Inc. Housing and Assistance Bonneville $14,285.00 Community Resource Center of Teton Valley Housing and Assistance Teton $10,000.00 Eastern Idaho Community College Food and Basic Needs Bonneville $5,000.00 Eastern Idaho Community Partnership Housing and Assistance Bonneville $15,000.00 Family Services Alliance of SE Idaho Inc Domestic Violence Bannock $14,000.00 Family Services Alliance of SE Idaho Inc Domestic Violence Bannock $5,415.00 Gate City Christian Church Food and Basic Needs Bannock $2,000.00 Giving Cupboard Food and Basic Needs Jefferson $5,000.00 Idaho State University Food and Basic Needs Bannock $20,000.00 JRM Foundation (Fort Hall COVID‐19 Relief Fund) Food and Basic Needs Bannock $5,000.00 Lemhi County Crisis Intervention, Mahoney House Domestic Violence Lemhi $7,800.00 Lemhi County Crisis Intervention, Mahoney House Domestic Violence Lemhi $5,415.00 NAMI Idaho Health Bannock $16,000.00 Oneida Crisis Center Food and Basic Needs Oneida $1,500.00 Pocatello Free Clinic Health Bannock $8,300.00 Regional Council for Christian Ministry Food and Basic Needs Bonneville $7,345.00 Rigby Senior Center Food and Basic Needs Jefferson $5,000.00 Senior Activity Center Food and Basic Needs Bingham $2,530.00 Senior Citizens' Community Center, Inc. -
To See a Complete List of All Special Plates Types Available
2021 SPECIAL LICENSE PLATE FUND INFORMATION Plate Program Fund Name Responsible Organization (Idaho Code) Program Purpose Friends of 4-H Division University of Idaho Foundation 4H (49-420M) Funds to be used for educational events, training materials for youth and leaders, and to better prepare Idaho youth for future careers. Agriculture Ag in the Classroom Account Department of Agriculture (49-417B) Develop and present an ed. program for K-12 students with a better understanding of the crucial role of agriculture today, and how Idaho agriculture relates to the world. Appaloosa N/A Appaloosa Horse Club (49-420C) Funding of youth horse programs in Idaho. Idaho Aviation Foundation Idaho Aviation Association Aviation (49-420K) Funds use by the Idaho Aviation Foundation for grants relating to the maintenance, upgrade and development of airstrips and for improving access and promoting safety at backcountry and recreational airports in Idaho. N/A - Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation Biking (49-419E) Funds shall be used exclusively for the preservation, maintenance, and expansion of recreational trails within the state of Idaho and on which mountain biking is permitted. Capitol Commission Idaho Capitol Endowment Income Fund – IC 67-1611 Capitol Commission (49-420A) To help fund the restoration of the Idaho Capitol building located in Boise, Idaho. Centennial Highway Distribution Account Idaho Transportation Department (49-416) All revenue shall be deposited in the highway distribution account. Choose Life N/A Choose Life Idaho, Inc. (49-420R) To help support pregnancy help centers in Idaho. To engage in education and support of adoption as a positive choice for women, thus encouraging alternatives to abortion. -
10. Palouse Prairie Section
10. Palouse Prairie Section Section Description The Palouse Prairie Section, part of the Columbia Plateau Ecoregion, is located along the western border of northern Idaho, extending west into Washington (Fig. 10.1, Fig. 10.2). This section is characterized by dissected loess-covered basalt plains, undulating plateaus, and river breaks. Elevation ranges from 220 to 1,700 m (722 to 5,577 ft). Soils are generally deep, loamy to silty, and have formed in loess, alluvium, or glacial outwash. The lower reaches and confluence of the Snake and Clearwater rivers are major waterbodies. Climate is maritime influenced. Precipitation ranges from 25 to 76 cm (10 to 30 in) annually, falling primarily during the fall, winter, and spring, and winter precipitation falls mostly as snow. Summers are relatively dry. Average annual temperature ranges from 7 to 12 ºC (45 to 54 ºF). The growing season varies with elevation and lasts 100 to 170 days. Population centers within the Idaho portion of the section are Lewiston and Moscow, and small agricultural communities are dispersed throughout. Outdoor recreational opportunities include hunting, angling, hiking, biking, and wildlife viewing. The largest Idaho Palouse Prairie grassland remnant on Gormsen Butte, south of Department of Fish and Moscow, Idaho with cropland surrounding © 2008 Janice Hill Game (IDFG) Wildlife Management Area (WMA) in Idaho, Craig Mountain WMA, is partially located within this section. The deep and highly-productive soils of the Palouse Prairie have made dryland farming the primary land use in this section. Approximately 44% of the land is used for agriculture with most farming operations occurring on private land. -
THE CATHOLIC COMMUNITIES of the WOOD RIVER VALLEY
THE CATHOLIC COMMUNITIES of the WOOD RIVER VALLEY Fr. Justin Brady, Pastor January 10, 2021 St. Charles Our Lady Borromeo of the Snows 315 1st Avenue South 206 Sun Valley Road Hailey, Idaho Sun Valley, Idaho Holy Mass: Holy Mass: English: Saturday 5:00 p.m. Sunday 8:30 a.m. Sunday 10:30 a.m. Wednesday 7:30 a.m. Tuesday, Thursday, Friday Thursday 5:30 p.m. 8:00 a.m. Spanish: Saturday 7:30 p.m. Communion Wednesday 7:00 p.m. Service: Monday, Wednesday Confession: 8:00 a.m. Wednesday 6:00-7:00 p.m. Confession: Office Hours: Saturday 4:00-5:00 p.m. Tuesday-Friday or by appointment 9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m. Office Hours: Contact Information: Monday-Friday P.O. Box 789 9:00 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Hailey, ID 83333 Phone: 208-788-3024 Contact Information: Fax: 208-788-0726 P.O. Box 1650 [email protected] Sun Valley, ID 83353 Phone: 208-622-3432 www.stcharleshailey.org lmighty ever-living God, A Fax: 208-622-4348 Immaculate who, when Christ had been baptized parishoffi[email protected] www.svcatholic.org Conception in the River Jordan and as the Holy Spirit descended upon him, Fairfield, Idaho solemnly declared him your beloved Son, Contact St. Charles grant that your children by adoption, for Holy Mass Schedule reborn of water and the Holy Spirit, may always be well pleasing to you. Our Lady of the Snows. January 9th and 10th, 2021 WEEKLY CALENDAR: MONDAY Communion Service 8:00 a.m. -
Geologic Map of the Grangeville East Quadrangle, Idaho County, Idaho
IDAHO GEOLOGICAL SURVEY DIGITAL WEB MAP 86 MOSCOW-BOISE-POCATELLO SCHMIDT AND OTHERS Sixmile Creek pluton to the north near Orofino (Lee, 2004) and an age of indicate consistent dextral, southeast-side-up shear sense across this zone. REFERENCES GEOLOGIC MAP OF THE GRANGEVILLE EAST QUADRANGLE, IDAHO COUNTY, IDAHO CORRELATION OF MAP UNITS about 118 Ma in tonalite in the Hazard Creek complex to the south near Thus, the prebasalt history along this structure was likely oblique, dextral- McCall (Manduca and others, 1993). reverse shear that appears to offset the accreted terrane-continent suture Anderson, A.L., 1930, The geology and mineral resources of the region about zone by several miles in the adjoining Harpster quadrangle to the east. Orofino, Idaho: Idaho Geological Survey Pamphlet 34, 63 p. Quartz porphyry (Permian to Cretaceous)Quartz-phyric rock that is probably Artificial Alluvial Mass Movement Volcanic Rocks Intrusive Island-Arc Metavolcanic KPqp Barker, F., 1979, Trondhjemite: definition, environment, and hypotheses of origin, a shallow intrusive body. Highly altered and consists almost entirely of To the southeast of the Mt. Idaho shear zone, higher-grade, hornblende- Disclaimer: This Digital Web Map is an informal report and may be Deposits Deposits Deposits Rocks and Metasedimentary Rocks in Barker, F., ed., Trondhjemites, Dacites, and Related Rocks, Elsevier, New Keegan L. Schmidt, John D. Kauffman, David E. Stewart, quartz, sericite, and iron oxides. Historic mining activity at the Dewey Mine dominated gneiss and schist and minor marble (JPgs and JPm) occur along revised and formally published at a later time. Its content and format m York, p. -
Wood*River*Bicycle*Coalition
Testimony*of*Brett*Stevenson,*! Wood*River*Bicycle*Coalition,*! a*Chapter*of*the*International*Mountain*Bicycling*Association! Before*the*U.S.*Senate*Committee*on*Energy*and*Natural*Resources! Subcommittee*on*Public*Lands,*Forests,*and*Mining! Legislative*Hearing*on*the*Sawtooth*National*Recreation*Area*and*Jerry*Peak* Wilderness*Additions*Act*S.583.! ! Thank!you!Chairman!Murkowski,!Ranking!Member!Cantwell,!and!distinguished!members! of!the!Committee.!I!appreciate!the!opportunity!to!weigh!in!on!this!important!bill!effecting! the! management! of! our! public! lands.! It! is! an! honor! and! a! privilege! to! provide! a! local! perspective!on!issues!that!are!so!critical!to!our!quality!of!life!!and!the!outdoor!recreation! economy,!nationally!and!locally.! ! My!name!is!Brett!Stevenson!and!I!am!a!native!of!Idaho.!My!parents!left!their!careers!in!San! Francisco! before! I! was! born! in! search! of! something! new,! wholesome,! and! fresh.! They! discovered!the!Wood!River!Valley!and!something!resonated.!The!rural!authenticity,!infinite! amount! of! mountain! adventure! and! wealth! of! recreational! opportunities,! and! rugged,! beautiful!landscape!of!Idaho!was!where!they!wanted!to!spend!their!life!lives!and!raise!their! children.! ! They! bought! land! and! started! farming.! For! over! forty! years! now! my! family! has! been! growing!barley!for!Coors!Brewing!Company!and!in!that!time,!we’ve!gotten!pretty!good.!We! have! become! ! MillerCoors’! Showcase! Barley! Farm.! A! distinction! earned! by! making! irrigation! adjustments! to! save! -
Open File #625 1962 62-0120 Prepared Partly in Cooperation With
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY QUATERNARY GEOLOGY OF THE BELLEVUE AREA IN BLAINE AND CAMAS COUNTIES, IDAHO by Dwight Lyman Schmidt Open File #625 1962 62-0120 Prepared partly in cooperation with the U. S. Atomic Energy Commission This report is preliminary and has not been edited for conformity with U.S. Geological Survey standards. Some of the nomenclature used in this report does not conform with that in use by the Survey. QOATKRHARY OBOLOOY OF THE BELU5VOE AREA IV BIAIHE AHD GAMAS COOTTEBS, IDAHO by Didjht L. Sehsddt ABSTRACT The Bellevue area covers about 350 square miles of a foothill belt between the Rocky Mountains to the north and the Snake River Plains to the south* Complexly deforaed inpure ouartzites and llBestones of the Mlssissippian Mllllgen and Pennsylvanian*Pendan Wood River fbraations vere intruded by large bodies of quartz diorlte and granodiorite along regional structures trending northwesterly; the intrusions are part of the Cretaceous Idaho batholith* Xrosional rennants of the Ghallis vol- canies, doodnantly latitie to andesitie in composition and early(r) to Kiddle Tertiary in age* rest unconfbraably on the older rocks* A sequence of Pliocene rhyolitic ash flow and basaltic lava flows uneonfbrsably overlies the Coallis and older rocks and is in turn unconfbraably overlain by oliviaa basalt of late Pliocene or early Quaternary age* The sain Talleys of the area, partly erosional and partly structural in origin, are underlain by late Quaternary olirLne basalt flows (Snake River basalt) -
Payette National Forest
Appendix 2 Proposed Forest Plan Amendments Sawtooth National Forest Land and Resource Management Plan Chapter III Sawtooth WCS Appendix 2 Chapter III. Management Direction Table of Contents Management Direction......................................................................................................... III-1 Forest-Wide Management Direction ................................................................................ III-1 Threatened, Endangered, Proposed, and Candidate Species ....................................... III-1 Air Quality and Smoke Management .......................................................................... III-4 Wildlife Resources ....................................................................................................... III-5 Vegetation .................................................................................................................... III-9 Non-native Plants ....................................................................................................... III-13 Fire Management ....................................................................................................... III-14 Timberland Resources ............................................................................................... III-16 Rangeland Resources ................................................................................................. III-17 Minerals and Geology Resources .............................................................................. III-18 Lands and Special -
Baseline and Stewardship Monitoring on Sawtooth National Forest Research Natural Areas
Baseline and stewardship monitoring on Sawtooth National Forest Research Natural Areas Steven K. Rust and Jennifer J. Miller April 2003 Idaho Conservation Data Center Department of Fish and Game 600 South Walnut, P.O. Box 25 Boise, Idaho 83707 Steven M. Huffaker, Director Prepared for: USDA Forest Service Sawtooth National Forest ii Table of Contents Introduction ............................................... 1 Study Area ............................................... 1 Methods ................................................. 4 Results .................................................. 5 Recommendations and Conclusions .......................... 12 Literature Cited ........................................... 14 List of Figures ............................................ 16 List of Tables ............................................ 26 Appendix A .............................................. 35 Appendix B .............................................. 36 Appendix C .............................................. 61 iii iv Introduction Research natural areas are part of a national network of ecological areas designated in perpetuity for research and education and to maintain biological diversity on National Forest System lands. Seven research natural areas occur on Sawtooth National Forest: Basin Gulch, Mount Harrison, Pole Canyon, Pole Creek Exclosure, Redfish Lake Moraine, Sawtooth Valley Peatlands, and Trapper Creek (Figure 1). These natural areas were established in the late 1980s and mid 1990s to provide representation of a diverse -
By David M. Miller Open-File Report 81-463 This Report Is Preliminary
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GEOLOGICAL SURVEY PROPOSED CORRELATION OF AN ALLOCHTHONOUS QUARTZITE SEQUENCE IN THE ALBION MOUNTAINS, IDAHO, WITH PROTEROZOIC Z AND LOWER CAMBRIAN STRATA OF THE PILOT RANGE, UTAH AND NEVADA by David M. Miller Open-File Report 81-463 This report is preliminary and has not been reviewed for conformity with U. S. Geological Survey editorial standards and stratigraphic nomenclature. ABSTRACT A thick sequence of quartzite and schist exposed on Mount Harrison in the Albion Mountains, Idaho, is described and tentatively correlated with the upper part of Proterozoic Z McCoy Creek Group and Proterozoic Z and Lower Cambrian Prospect Mountain Quartzite (restricted) in the Pilot Range, Utah and Nevada, on the basis of lithology, thickness, and sedimentary structures. Correlations with early Paleozoic or middle Proterozoic strata exposed in central Idaho are considered to be less probable. Rapid thickness changes and locally thick conglomerates in Unit G of McCoy Creek Group (and its proposed correlatives in the Albion Mountains) indicate that cJepositional environments were variable locally. Environments were more uniform during the deposition of limy shaly and limestone in the top of Unit G and quartz sandstone in subsequent strata. The strata on Mount Harrison identified as Proterozoic Z and Lower Cambrian in this study are part of an overturned, structurally complicated sequence of metasedimentary rocks that lie tec topically on overturned, metamorphosed Ordovician carbonate strata and possible metamorphosed Cambrian shale, suggesting that a typical miogeoclinal sequence (Proterozoic Z to Ordovician) was possibly once present near the Albion Mountains area. Elsewhere in the Albion Mountains and the adjoining Raft River and Grouse Creek Mountains, however, Ordovician carbonate rocks appear to stratigraphically overlie metamorphosed clastic rocks of uncertain age that are dissimilar to miogeoclinal rocks of the region. -
Real Estate Service for North Central Idaho
EXPERIENCE North Central Visitor’s Guide | 2016 | 2017 2 EXPERIENCE NORTH CENTRAL IDAHO 4 Idaho County 10 Osprey: Birds of Prey 12 Clearwater County 16 US Highway 12 Waterfalls 22 Lewis County From the deepest gorge in 28 Heart of the Monster: History of the Nimiipuu North America to the prairies of harvest 34 Nez Perce County (and everything else in between). 39 The Levee Come explore with us. SARAH S. KLEMENT, 42-44Dining Guide PUBLISHER Traveling On? Regional Chamber Directory DAVID P. RAUZI, 46 EDITOR CONTRIBUTED PHOTO: MICHELLE FORD COVER PHOTO BY ROBERT MILLAGE. Advertising Inquires Submit Stories SARAH KLEMENT, PUBLISHER DAVID RAUZI, EDITOR Publications of Eagle Media Northwest [email protected] [email protected] 900 W. Main, PO Box 690, Grangeville ID 83530 DEB JONES, PUBLISHER (MONEYSAVER) SARAH KLEMENT, PUBLISHER 208-746-0483, Lewiston; 208-983-1200, Grangeville [email protected] [email protected] EXPERIENCE NORTH CENTRAL IDAHO 3 PHOTO BY ROBERT MILLAGE 4 EXPERIENCE NORTH CENTRAL IDAHO PHOTO BY SARAH KLEMENT PHOTO BY DAVID RAUZI A scenic view of the Time Zone Bridge greets those entering or leaving the Idaho County town of Riggins (above) while McComas Meadows (top, right) is a site located in the mountains outside of Harpster. (Right, middle) Hells Canyon is a popular fishing spot and (bottom, right) the Sears Creek area is home to a variety of wildlife, including this flock of turkeys. Idaho County — said to be named for the Steamer Idaho that was launched June 9, 1860, on the Columbia River — spans the Idaho PHOTO BY MOUNTAIN RIVER OUTFITTERS panhandle and borders three states, but imposing geography sets this area apart from the rest of the United States.