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UMNP Mountains Manual 2017
Mountain Adventures Manual utahmasternaturalist.org June 2017 UMN/Manual/2017-03pr Welcome to Utah Master Naturalist! Utah Master Naturalist was developed to help you initiate or continue your own personal journey to increase your understanding of, and appreciation for, Utah’s amazing natural world. We will explore and learn aBout the major ecosystems of Utah, the plant and animal communities that depend upon those systems, and our role in shaping our past, in determining our future, and as stewards of the land. Utah Master Naturalist is a certification program developed By Utah State University Extension with the partnership of more than 25 other organizations in Utah. The mission of Utah Master Naturalist is to develop well-informed volunteers and professionals who provide education, outreach, and service promoting stewardship of natural resources within their communities. Our goal, then, is to assist you in assisting others to develop a greater appreciation and respect for Utah’s Beautiful natural world. “When we see the land as a community to which we belong, we may begin to use it with love and respect.” - Aldo Leopold Participating in a Utah Master Naturalist course provides each of us opportunities to learn not only from the instructors and guest speaKers, But also from each other. We each arrive at a Utah Master Naturalist course with our own rich collection of knowledge and experiences, and we have a unique opportunity to share that Knowledge with each other. This helps us learn and grow not just as individuals, but together as a group with the understanding that there is always more to learn, and more to share. -
ACEC Evaluations for Existing and Nominated ACEC – Relevance and Importance
Evaluations for Existing and Nominated ACECs, Relevance and Importance, Monticello Field Office, July 2005 ACEC Evaluations for Existing and Nominated ACEC – Relevance and Importance TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. Background - Areas of Environmental Concern ………………….……….. 3 FLPMA …………………………………………. 3 43CFR 1610.7-2 ………………………………… 3 BLM Manual 1613 ……………………………… 3 NOI – BLM Monticello Field Office ……………. 4 San Juan County Perspectives on ACECs ………. 4 State of Utah Perspectives on ACECs …………… 4 ACECs and Wilderness Study Areas ……………... 5 2. The ACEC Process – Table ……………………………………………….. 6 3. Summary ………………………………………………………………….. 7 Table 3.1 MFO ACECs from 1991 RMP ……..…... 7 Table 3.2 Nominated ACEC by BLM FOs ..……… 7 Table 3.3 Nominated ACECs by SUWA ………… 8 Table 3,4 Summary Table of Potential ACECs …. 8 Table 3.5 MFO ID Team …………………………. 9 4. Existing ACECs – Monticello Field Office ………………………………. 10 Alkali Ridge ACEC ……………………………... 10 Bridger Jack Mesa ACEC ……………………… 10 Butler Wash ACEC ……………………………… 11 Cedar Mesa ACEC ……………………………… 12 Dark Canyon ACEC …………………………….. 13 Hovenweep ACEC ……………………………….. 14 Indian Creek ACEC ……………………………… 15 Lavender Mesa ACEC …………………………… 16 Scenic Highway Corridor ACEC ………………… 16 Shay Canyon ACEC ……………………………... 17 Table 4.1: Special Management Consideration for BLM ACECs designated in the 1991 RMP ………….. 18 5. Nominated ACECs ………………………………………………………. 19 Lockhart Basin …………………………............... 19 Valley of the Gods ……………………………… 20 Letter from SUWA ………………………………. .. 22 Table 5.2 - Nominated by SUWA ………………… 24 1. Canyonlands ………………………………… 24 2. Cedar Mesa ………………………………….. 27 3. Dark Canyon ………………………………… 29 4. Monument Canyon ………………………….. 31 5. Redrock Plateau ……………………………… 33 6. San Juan River ………………………………. 36 7. White Canyon ……………………………….. 39 Evaluations for Existing and Nominated ACECs, Monticello Field Office, Relevance and Importance, July 2005 6. Evaluation Process and Relevance and Importance Criteria …………… 42 The Scope of the Evaluation Process 6.1 Evaluation of existing ACECs ……………….. -
OUTREACH NOTICE Forestry Technician, Initial Attack Dispatcher GS-5/6/7 18/8
OUTREACH NOTICE Forestry Technician, Initial Attack Dispatcher GS-5/6/7 18/8 REGION 4 – MANTI-LA SAL NATIONAL FOREST DUTY STATION: Moab, UTAH POSITION: The Supervisors Office of the Manti-La Sal National Forest will soon be seeking applicants for a Forestry Technician, (Initial Attack Dispatcher), GS-0462-5/6/7 position at the Moab Interagency Fire Center (MIFC). This is a permanent part-time position (18/8) with the duty station in Moab, Utah. DUTIES: This position is located at MIFC where the incumbent will be an Initial Attack Dispatcher for the interagency center and assist with other fire center duties as assigned. The Moab Interagency Fire Center represents the five wildland fire agencies in Southeastern Utah, providing resource coordination between the Manti-La Sal National Forest, Division of Forestry, Fire and State Lands, Bureau of Land Management, National Park Service and Bureau of Indian Affairs. The MIFC dispatch area involves nearly 10 million acres of terrain that ranges from grasslands at 4,000 feet to forested lands above 10,000 feet in elevation. Land status throughout the area is highly fragmented. Resources include two 10-person crews, 11 engines and 1 Type 3 Helicopter with crew and the Red Rock Regulars (Type 2 IA Handcrew). MIFC resources respond to an average of 200 to 400 incidents per year, with a fire season that extends from March through Mid November. This position is located in an initial attack fire suppression organization where the employee performs a variety of staff and administrative duties relating to fire suppression activities and the support of fire management programs. -
Acrobat Distiller, Job 6
Magmatism in Western Cascades Arc Early Tertiary Magmatism • Active from 38 to 17 Ma • New volcanic activity west of Clarno Fm Part II and south into Oregon Reference: • Western Cascade volcanism was mostly andesitic DNAG v. 3, Ch. 7, pp 294-314 • Some rhyolitic ash-flow sheets • Broad curving continuous belt of volcanoes Cascade-John Day Washington Magmatism • Overlapped older Challis and Tuscarora belts – Numerous shallow batholiths – Snowqualamie Batholith – Tatoosh Pluton • Represent subvolcanic magmatism • Younger High Cascades follows the same trend Western Oregon Southern Oregon • Oligocene calc-alkaline volcanic rocks • No units younger than 17 Ma present – Unconformable on Eocene rocks • Mafic alkalic rocks developed in • Andesite-dacite-rhyolite erupted from front of the western Cascades numerous centers • Nepheline syenite, Camptonite, • Few shallow subvolcanic intrusives Ferrogabbro 1 Cascade-John Day Northern California • Basaltic to rhyolitic volcanism • Age range of 31 to 20 Ma • Andesite mudflow breccias in Sierra foothills – Cedarville Volcanics – Extend into Nevada – Andesite breccias and rhyolite tuffs Cascade-John Day John Day Magmatic Region • Age of 36 to 18 Ma • Much downwind fall out from Western Cascades volcanism • High-silica, alkali rhyolite is common • Local alkali basalt to trachyte eruptions Southern Oregon Other Locations • Rhyolite to bimodal rhyolite- • Lovejoy basalt in California trachyandesite – Alkali basalts and trachyandesites • Summer lake, Goose Lake, Albert Rim • Owyhee Mountains, Idaho – Rhyolites -
Manti-La Sal Ranger Stations
United States Department of Agriculture Commodious Cabins & Forest Service Intermountain Region Handsome Structures MANTI-LA SAL NATIONAL FOREST MAY 2013 Administrative Facilities of the Manti-La Sal National Forest, 1905-1962 Historic Context Statement & Evaluations, Forest Service Report No. ML-13-1437 Cover: Ranger David Williams with his family at the Clay Springs Ranger Station, 1908 “A commodious cabin is being built, and other improvements which will be made will make the station a very convenient one.” – “Building New Ranger Station on Wilson Mesa,” Times Independent, November 18, 1920, 1 The new Moab building “is a handsome structure and affords ample space for the supervisor’s office. eventually the forest headquarters will be one of the most attractive locations in town.” – “Forest Service In New Building,” Times Independent, September 12, 1940, 1. Commodious Cabins and Handsome Structures Administrative Facilities of the Manti-La Sal National Forest, 1905-1962 Historic Context Statement and Evaluations Forest Service Report No. ML-13-1437 By Richa Wilson Regional Architectural Historian USDA Forest Service, Intermountain Region 324 25th Street Ogden, UT 84401 May 2013 TABLE OF CONTENTS PREFACE .................................................................................................................................................. V CHAPTER 1: OVERVIEW ........................................................................................................................... 1 SPATIAL BOUNDARIES ...................................................................................................................................................... -
Slickrock Foot Trail Provides an Opportunity for Beginners to Orient Themselves Dominating the Rest of the Scene Is the to Trails in Canyonlands National Park
Viewpoint 3 Viewpoint 4 Lower Little Spring Canyon Big Spring Canyon Slickrock Gifts from the Sea A Monumental Change The gray and purple rock layers visible in Grand View Point and Junction Butte, rising Foot Little Spring Canyon contrast sharply with a thousand feet above Big Spring Canyon, are the red and white rock that dominates most visible to the north. These landmarks show of The Needles district. Both, however, were erosional patterns typical of sedimentary derived from the same source — the ocean. rock. The various layers exhibit different Trail Millions of years ago this area was covered by degrees of resistance to weathering. Softer a shallow sea. Little Spring Canyon is pre- rocks, such as shales and mudstones, crumble TRAIL GUIDE dominately limestone, a hard sedimentary into slopes. Sandstones, limestones and other rock composed mostly of calcium harder rocks maintain vertical bluffs. The carbonate, the hard parts of massive Wingate cliffs, the most prominent tiny marine animals that layer, were once enormous sand dunes. settled to the ocean floor as they died. Fossilized The Canyonlands region re- remains of crinoids, mained near sea level during brachiopods and other the time these rock layers Navajo Ss. Brachiopod marine invertebrates were deposited. Change Kayenta Fm. give testimony came when massive forces to the ocean’s within the earth pushed Wingate Ss. Crinoid presence. these layers upward, forming the Monument The spires of The Needles district display Uplift and causing the Chinle Fm. the red-and-white banding of Cedar Mesa rock layers to fracture. Sandstone, which was formed as sandy Cracks and joints Moenkopi Sh. -
Table 7 - National Wilderness Areas by State
Table 7 - National Wilderness Areas by State * Unit is in two or more States ** Acres estimated pending final boundary determination + Special Area that is part of a proclaimed National Forest State National Wilderness Area NFS Other Total Unit Name Acreage Acreage Acreage Alabama Cheaha Wilderness Talladega National Forest 7,400 0 7,400 Dugger Mountain Wilderness** Talladega National Forest 9,048 0 9,048 Sipsey Wilderness William B. Bankhead National Forest 25,770 83 25,853 Alabama Totals 42,218 83 42,301 Alaska Chuck River Wilderness 74,876 520 75,396 Coronation Island Wilderness Tongass National Forest 19,118 0 19,118 Endicott River Wilderness Tongass National Forest 98,396 0 98,396 Karta River Wilderness Tongass National Forest 39,917 7 39,924 Kootznoowoo Wilderness Tongass National Forest 979,079 21,741 1,000,820 FS-administered, outside NFS bdy 0 654 654 Kuiu Wilderness Tongass National Forest 60,183 15 60,198 Maurille Islands Wilderness Tongass National Forest 4,814 0 4,814 Misty Fiords National Monument Wilderness Tongass National Forest 2,144,010 235 2,144,245 FS-administered, outside NFS bdy 0 15 15 Petersburg Creek-Duncan Salt Chuck Wilderness Tongass National Forest 46,758 0 46,758 Pleasant/Lemusurier/Inian Islands Wilderness Tongass National Forest 23,083 41 23,124 FS-administered, outside NFS bdy 0 15 15 Russell Fjord Wilderness Tongass National Forest 348,626 63 348,689 South Baranof Wilderness Tongass National Forest 315,833 0 315,833 South Etolin Wilderness Tongass National Forest 82,593 834 83,427 Refresh Date: 10/14/2017 -
Adventures Guide to Plan Your Custom Day of Of-Roading
“WILDERNESS IS NOT A LUXURY, BUT A NECESSITY OF THE HUMAN SPIRIT” - EDWARD ABBEY Dear Valued Guest, Welcome to Sorrel River Ranch Resort & Spa! During your visit we invite you to immerse yourself in the many bucket-list (or awe-inspiring) adventures available in this scenic land of arches, rivers, canyons, and mesas. Explore the surrounding areas with our knowledgeable guides by foot, horseback, air or water. Upon returning to the Ranch indulge yourself in a Signature Spa Treatment, a fresh garden-to-table meal and relaxing and reflective storytelling around the riverside campfire Our experienced adventure team will help curate custom adventure experiences that will expose you to the best that the Ranch and Moab have to ofer. We encourage you to get out of your comfort zone, discover the incredible secrets of the American Southwest, and allow us to create a customized itinerary for an unforgettable journey of exploration and exclusivity. Elizabeth Rad Owner, Elizabeth Rad Sorrel Sorrel River Ranch Resort & Spa Exclusive TABLE OF CONTENTS Horseback Riding.................................4-15 Guided Hiking & Driving Tours.............................................16-21 UTV Tours...................................................22-21 Jeep Tours..............................................24-25 Canyoneering, Rockaneering, & Climbing..............................................26-29 Mountain Biking.................................30-33 Kayaking & SUP..................................34-35 River Rafting..........................................36-37 -
Wild & Scenic Rivers Suitability Study
Wild and Scenic River Suitability Study for National Forest System Lands in Utah Record of Decision and Forest Plan Amendments The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) prohibits discrimination in all its programs and activities on the basis of race, color, national origin, gender, religion, age, disability, political beliefs, sexual orientation, or marital or family status. (Not all prohibited bases apply to all programs.) Persons with disabilities who require alternative means for communication of program information (Braille, large print, audiotape, etc.) should contact USDA's TARGET Center at (202) 720-2600 (voice and TDD). To file a complaint of discrimination, write USDA, Director, Office of Civil Rights, Room 326-W, Whitten Building, 14th and Independence Avenue, SW, Washington, DC 20250-9410, or call (202) 720-5964 (voice and TDD). USDA is an equal opportunity provider and employer. Wild and Scenic River Suitability Study for National Forest System Lands in Utah Record of Decision and Forest Plan Amendments Counties: Box Elder, Cache, Carbon, Daggett, Duchesne, Emery, Garfield, Grand, Kane, Millard, Piute, Salt Lake, Sanpete, San Juan, Sevier, Summit, Uintah, Utah, Wasatch, Washington, and Weber Counties, Utah; Montrose County, Colorado; and Uinta County, Wyoming Lead Agency: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service Cooperating Agencies: State of Utah; Bureau of Land Management (Utah State Office); Sweetwater County Conservation District; Uinta County Conservation District; and Sweetwater and Lincoln County, Wyoming Responsible Officials: KEVIN B. ELLIOTT, FOREST SUPERVISOR Ashley National Forest, 355 North Vernal Avenue, Vernal, Utah 84078 ROBERT G. MACWHORTER, FOREST SUPERVISOR Dixie National Forest, 1789 North Wedgewood Lane, Cedar City, Utah 84720 ALLEN ROWLEY, FOREST SUPERVISOR Fishlake National Forest, 115 East 900 North, Richfield, Utah 84701 PAMELA BROWN, FOREST SUPERVISOR Manti-La Sal National Forest, 599 West Price River Dr., Price, Utah 84501 BRIAN A. -
Miners Basin (Placer Creek) Suitability Evaluation Report (SER)
Miners Basin (Placer Creek) Suitability Evaluation Report (SER) STUDY AREA SUMMARY Name of River: Miners Basin (Placer Creek) River Mileage: Studied: 1.74 miles from the headwaters in Miners Basin on the southwest slopes of Horse Mountain to the junction with Pinhook Creek. Eligible: Same Location: Manti-La Sal National Forest, Moab Ranger District, Congressional District Miners Basin Grand County, Utah 2 (Placer Creek) Start End Classification Miles North Tributary Northing Northing 4267995 4267112 Segment 1 Easting Recreational 1.74 Easting 649262 652594 Appendix A – Suitability Evaluation Reports A-249 South Tributary Northing 4266716 Easting 652068 Coordinates are in UTM Zone 12 N. NAD 83, meters Physical Description of River Segment: The majority of the water in the Miners Basin (Placer Creek) drainage originates from a mine adit. Snowmelt and summer monsoons also augment flows in this small rocky drainage. Even though the gradients are steep in the headwaters, the channel is stable due mainly to rocky bottoms. The middle reaches cut through shale, and bank erosion is more prevalent. Lower reaches are in Castle Valley alluvial material that moves easily during spring runoff and intense summer rainstorms. There is no fish habitat in the watercourse, due to lack of perennial water, a small stream channel, and limited cover from bank vegetation and channel boulders. ELIGIBILITY Name and Date of Eligibility Document: Final Eligibility Determination of Wild and Scenic Rivers of Rivers, March 2003, (USDA Forest Service Supplement to the Manti-La Sal NF Final Eligibility Determination of Wild and Scenic Rivers, 2005) Determination of Free-flow: The watercourse is primarily free flowing but an old earthen impoundment has created a pond within the segment. -
Helicopter Landings in the Twin Peaks, Lone Peak, and Mount Timpanogos Wilderness Areas to Capture and Collar Mountain Goats
United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service Helicopter landings in the Twin Peaks, Lone Peak, and Mount Timpanogos wilderness areas to capture and collar mountain goats and bighorn sheep project Environmental Assessment Uinta-Wasatch-Cache National Forest, Salt Lake and Pleasant Grove Ranger Districts, Salt Lake and Utah Counties, Utah July 2017 Environmental Assessment Helicopter landings in the Twin Peaks, Lone Peak, and Mount Timpanogos wilderness areas to capture and collar mountain goats and bighorn sheep Uinta-Wasatch-Cache National Forest, Salt Lake and Pleasant Grove Ranger Districts, Salt Lake and Utah Counties, Utah Lead Agency: U.S. Forest Service Responsible Official: David C. Whittekiend, Forest Supervisor 857 West South Jordan Parkway South Jordan, UT 84095 For Information Contact: Pamela Manders, Forest Wildlife Program Manager 857 West South Jordan Parkway South Jordan, UT 84095 Cover Photo: Photo by Rusty Robinson. In accordance with Federal civil rights law and U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) civil rights regulations and policies, the USDA, its Agencies, offices, and employees, and institutions participating in or administering USDA programs are prohibited from discriminating based on race, color, national origin, religion, sex, gender identity (including gender expression), sexual orientation, disability, age, marital status, family/parental status, income derived from a public assistance program, political beliefs, or reprisal or retaliation for prior civil rights activity, in any program or activity conducted or funded by USDA (not all bases apply to all programs). Remedies and complaint filing deadlines vary by program or incident. Persons with disabilities who require alternative means of communication for program information (e.g., Braille, large print, audiotape, American Sign Language, etc.) should contact the responsible Agency or USDA’s TARGET Center at (202) 720-2600 (voice and TTY) or contact USDA through the Federal Relay Service at (800) 877-8339. -
Page 1464 TITLE 16—CONSERVATION § 1132
§ 1132 TITLE 16—CONSERVATION Page 1464 Department and agency having jurisdiction of, and reports submitted to Congress regard- thereover immediately before its inclusion in ing pending additions, eliminations, or modi- the National Wilderness Preservation System fications. Maps, legal descriptions, and regula- unless otherwise provided by Act of Congress. tions pertaining to wilderness areas within No appropriation shall be available for the pay- their respective jurisdictions also shall be ment of expenses or salaries for the administra- available to the public in the offices of re- tion of the National Wilderness Preservation gional foresters, national forest supervisors, System as a separate unit nor shall any appro- priations be available for additional personnel and forest rangers. stated as being required solely for the purpose of managing or administering areas solely because (b) Review by Secretary of Agriculture of classi- they are included within the National Wilder- fications as primitive areas; Presidential rec- ness Preservation System. ommendations to Congress; approval of Con- (c) ‘‘Wilderness’’ defined gress; size of primitive areas; Gore Range-Ea- A wilderness, in contrast with those areas gles Nest Primitive Area, Colorado where man and his own works dominate the The Secretary of Agriculture shall, within ten landscape, is hereby recognized as an area where years after September 3, 1964, review, as to its the earth and its community of life are un- suitability or nonsuitability for preservation as trammeled by man, where man himself is a visi- wilderness, each area in the national forests tor who does not remain. An area of wilderness classified on September 3, 1964 by the Secretary is further defined to mean in this chapter an area of undeveloped Federal land retaining its of Agriculture or the Chief of the Forest Service primeval character and influence, without per- as ‘‘primitive’’ and report his findings to the manent improvements or human habitation, President.