Aquatic Invasive Species Waterway Buffer Is One Half Mile Upstream
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Page 5 of the 2020 Antelope, Deer and Elk Regulations
WYOMING GAME AND FISH COMMISSION Antelope, 2020 Deer and Elk Hunting Regulations Don't forget your conservation stamp Hunters and anglers must purchase a conservation stamp to hunt and fish in Wyoming. (See page 6) See page 18 for more information. wgfd.wyo.gov Wyoming Hunting Regulations | 1 CONTENTS Access on Lands Enrolled in the Department’s Walk-in Areas Elk or Hunter Management Areas .................................................... 4 Hunt area map ............................................................................. 46 Access Yes Program .......................................................................... 4 Hunting seasons .......................................................................... 47 Age Restrictions ................................................................................. 4 Characteristics ............................................................................. 47 Antelope Special archery seasons.............................................................. 57 Hunt area map ..............................................................................12 Disabled hunter season extension.............................................. 57 Hunting seasons ...........................................................................13 Elk Special Management Permit ................................................. 57 Characteristics ..............................................................................13 Youth elk hunters........................................................................ -
Geologic Map of South Dakota
STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA M. Michael Rounds, Governor DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENT AND NATURAL RESOURCES Steven M. Pirner, Secretary DIVISION OF FINANCIAL AND TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE David Templeton, Director GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Derric L. Iles, State Geologist Geologic Map of South Dakota James E. Martin, J. Foster Sawyer, Mark D. Fahrenbach, Dennis W. Tomhave, Layne D. Schulz 2004 References to Accompany General Map 10 Agnew, A.F., 1957, Areal geology of the White River quadrangle: South Dakota Geological Survey Geologic Quadrangle Map, scale 1:62,500. ____1963, Geology of the Mission quadrangle: South Dakota Geological Survey Geologic Quadrangle Map, scale 1:62,500. Agnew, A.F., and Tychsen, P.C., 1965, A guide to the stratigraphy of South Dakota: South Dakota Geological Survey Bulletin 14, 195 p. Alkhazmi, R.A., 1973, Structural analysis of the Precambrian rocks of the Park Dome area, Custer County, Black Hills of South Dakota: Rapid City, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology, M.S. thesis, 92 p. Anna, L.O., 1973, Geology of the Kirk Hill area, Lawrence-Meade Counties, South Dakota: Rapid City, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology, M.S. thesis, 47 p. Atkinson, R.D., 1976, Geology of the Pony Gulch area near Mystic, South Dakota: Rapid City, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology, M.S. thesis, 21 p. Baird, J.D., 1957, Geology of the Alcester quadrangle, South Dakota–Iowa: Vermillion, University of South Dakota, M.A. thesis, 136 p. Baker, C.L., 1948, The Pennington-Haakon County central boundary area with general discussion of its surroundings: South Dakota Geological Survey Report of Investigations 64, 29 p. -
Grand County Master Trails Plan
GRAND COUNTY MASTER TRAILS PLAN PREPARED FOR: Headwaters Trails Alliance July, 2015 CONTACT INFORMATION: Headwaters Trails Alliance Meara Michel, Executive Director Phone: 970.726.1013 Email: [email protected] Web: www.headwaterstrails.org HEADWATERS TRAILS ALLIANCE Master Trails Plan TABLE OF CONTENTS GRAND COUNTY MASTER TRAILS PLAN OVERVIEW...............................................................................................................................1 EXISTING PLANS AND DATA..............................................................................................5 HTA MISSION AND GOALS................................................................................................14 OPPORTUNITIES & CONSTRAINTS................................................................................16 SUBAREA PLANS PLANNING SUBAREAS.......................................................................................................19 WINTER PARK/FRASER AREA.........................................................................................20 OVERVIEW.....................................................................................................................20 EXISTING TRAIL CONDITIONS...............................................................................22 STAKEHOLDER OUTREACH SUMMARY..............................................................23 OPPORTUNITIES & CONSTRAINTS........................................................................24 GOALS, OBJECTIVES, & BENCHMARKS..............................................................27 -
Triangulation in Utah 1871-1934
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR Harold L. Ickes, Secretary GEOLOGICAL SURVEY W. C. Mendenhall, Director Bulletin 913 TRIANGULATION IN UTAH 1871-1934 J. G. STAACK Chief Topographic Engineer UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE WASHINGTON: 1940 Tor sale by the Superintendent of Documents, Washington, D. C. Price 20 cents (paper) CONTENTS Page Introduction ______________________________________________________ 1 Scope of report------__-_-_---_----_------------ --__---__ _ 1 Precision __ _ ________________________ _ __________________ _ ___ 1 Instruments used._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 2 Station marks___- _ _.__ __ __ _ 2 Datum_-_-_-__ __________________________ ______ ______-___.__ 3 Methods of readjustment..._____.-.__..________.___._._...___.__ 4 Form of results__-.________________________ _.___-_____.______ 5 Arrangement__.______________________________ _ ___ _ ________ 6 Descriptions of stations._______________________________________ 6 Azimuths and distances.__ ____-_.._---_--_________ -____ __ __ ^ 7 Maps.__----__-----_-_---__-_--_-___-_-___-__-__-_-_-___.-.__ 7 Personnel_ _ __-----_-_-_---_---------_--__-____-__-_.--_.___ . 7 Projects 9 Uinta Forest Reserve, 1897-98_ 9 Cottonwood and Park City special quadrangles, 1903____ _ 19 Iron Springs special quadrangle, 1905____________________________ 22 Northeastern Utah, 1909.. -_. 26 Eastern Utah, 1910 - . 30 Logan quadrangle, 1913._________-__-__'_--______-___:_____.____ 42 Uintah County, 1913___-__. 48 Eastern Utah, 1914.. ... _ _ .. 55 Northern Utah, 1915 (Hodgeson)_____-___ __-___-_-_-__-_--. _. 58 Northern Utah, 1915 <Urquhart)_. -
Summits on the Air – ARM for the USA (W7A
Summits on the Air – ARM for the U.S.A (W7A - Arizona) Summits on the Air U.S.A. (W7A - Arizona) Association Reference Manual Document Reference S53.1 Issue number 5.0 Date of issue 31-October 2020 Participation start date 01-Aug 2010 Authorized Date: 31-October 2020 Association Manager Pete Scola, WA7JTM Summits-on-the-Air an original concept by G3WGV and developed with G3CWI Notice “Summits on the Air” SOTA and the SOTA logo are trademarks of the Programme. This document is copyright of the Programme. All other trademarks and copyrights referenced herein are acknowledged. Document S53.1 Page 1 of 15 Summits on the Air – ARM for the U.S.A (W7A - Arizona) TABLE OF CONTENTS CHANGE CONTROL....................................................................................................................................... 3 DISCLAIMER................................................................................................................................................. 4 1 ASSOCIATION REFERENCE DATA ........................................................................................................... 5 1.1 Program Derivation ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 6 1.2 General Information ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 6 1.3 Final Ascent -
Profiles of Colorado Roadless Areas
PROFILES OF COLORADO ROADLESS AREAS Prepared by the USDA Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Region July 23, 2008 INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK 2 3 TABLE OF CONTENTS ARAPAHO-ROOSEVELT NATIONAL FOREST ......................................................................................................10 Bard Creek (23,000 acres) .......................................................................................................................................10 Byers Peak (10,200 acres)........................................................................................................................................12 Cache la Poudre Adjacent Area (3,200 acres)..........................................................................................................13 Cherokee Park (7,600 acres) ....................................................................................................................................14 Comanche Peak Adjacent Areas A - H (45,200 acres).............................................................................................15 Copper Mountain (13,500 acres) .............................................................................................................................19 Crosier Mountain (7,200 acres) ...............................................................................................................................20 Gold Run (6,600 acres) ............................................................................................................................................21 -
Deer Season Subject to the Species Limitation of Their License in the Hunt Area(S) Where Their License Is Valid As Specified in Section 2 of This Chapter
CHAPTER 6 DEER HUNTING SEASONS Section 1. Authority. This regulation is promulgated by authority of Wyoming Statutes § 23-1-302, § 23-1-703 and § 23-2-104. Section 2. Regular Hunting Seasons. Hunt areas, season dates and limitations. Special Regular Season Hunt License Archery Dates Dates Area Type Opens Closes Opens Closes Quota Limitations 1 Gen Sep. 1 Sep. 30 Nov. 1 Nov. 20 Antlered deer off private land; any deer on private land 1 Gen Nov. 21 Nov. 30 Antlered white-tailed deer off private land; any white-tailed deer on private land 1, 2, 7 Sep. 1 Sep. 30 Nov. 1 Nov. 30 3500 Doe or fawn valid on 3 private land 2 Gen Sep. 1 Sep. 30 Nov. 1 Nov. 30 Antlered deer off private land; any deer on private land 3 Gen Sep. 1 Sep. 30 Nov. 1 Nov. 30 Antlered deer off private land; any deer on private land 4 Gen Sep. 1 Sep. 30 Nov. 1 Nov. 20 Antlered deer off private land; any deer on private land except the lands of the State of Wyoming's Ranch A property shall be closed 4 7 Sep. 1 Sep. 30 Nov. 1 Nov. 20 300 Doe or fawn valid on private land 5 Gen Sep. 1 Sep. 30 Nov. 1 Nov. 20 Antlered deer off private land; any deer on private land 5 6 Sep. 1 Sep. 30 Nov. 1 Nov. 20 200 Doe or fawn 6-1 6 Gen Sep. 1 Sep. 30 Nov. 1 Nov. 20 Antlered deer off private land; any deer on private land 7 Gen Sep. -
Geology, Petrochemistry, and Time-Space Evolution of the Cripple Creek District, Colorado
The Geological Society of America Field Guide 10 2007 Geology, petrochemistry, and time-space evolution of the Cripple Creek district, Colorado Eric P. Jensen* Mark D. Barton* Center for Mineral Resources, Department of Geosciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85719, USA ABSTRACT The Cripple Creek district is renowned for epithermal gold telluride veins which have produced over 22 million ounces of gold from an intensely altered diatreme complex (total production + economic resources of >1000 tons). The district is also renowned for its association with a rare class of alkaline igneous rocks. The volcanism at Cripple Creek was part of a regionally extensive episode of Oligocene magma- tism, including large volumes of calc-alkaline rocks and smaller, but widely distrib- uted alkaline centers. Amongst the mid-Tertiary alkaline intrusive complexes, only Cripple Creek is associated with a giant (>500 ton) gold deposit. Further study of the magmatic and hydrothermal evolution of these systems will be necessary to explain this apparent disparity in gold enrichment. Cripple Creek’s gold mineralization principally occurs as telluride minerals hosted by swarms of narrow veins. Most geological studies over the last century have focused on the high-grade veins and to a lesser degree, adjacent hydrothermal altera- tion, but metasomatism is now shown to be broadly developed and demonstrably accompanied many events throughout the evolution of the igneous complex. Altera- tion types ranged from minor early pyroxene-stable varieties through various biotite- bearing assemblages into voluminous K-feldspar stable types. Hydrolytic (acid) styles of alteration are present but minor. Economic gold mineralization is intimately asso- ciated only with late, voluminous K-feldspar-pyrite alteration which affected >5 km3 of the explored portion (upper 1 km) of the complex. -
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26 287 385 Wheatland Scotts Bluff NM 30 Res. 85 Rawlins Gering 80 25 Bridgeport 130 Harrisburg Arthur 80 385 Green River North Platte R. 26 789 80 Oshkosh 130 Laramie 191 Lake 230 Kimball McConaugh 30 Lodgepole Creek Flaming 80 Sidney Gorge 230 Cheyenne Ogallala Reservoir Wyoming 70 N ebraska Chappell 30 80 Manila A BCDEFG230 HIJKL MNOP Laramie R. Ovid Big Creek Virginia Dale Peetz Julesburg Res. Lake Julesburg 1 Sedgwick 125 Pawnee National Grassland South Platte Grant Glendevey Livermore Pawnee North 138 Crook Delany Butte Red Feather Lakes 25 85 71 Sterling River Trail Lake Pioneer Res. Iliff Clark Elk R. N. Platte R. Walden Res. Canadian R. Cache La Poudre R. Walden 287 Wellington Nunn Trails Fleming 318 13 14 Rustic Pierce Green R. Bellvue Haxtun Michigan R. 14 Sterling Little Snake R. Cache la Poudre- Fort Collins Ault 14 6 Dinosaur NM Craig North Park Horsetooth 144 2 Maybell Hayden Res. Timnath Eaton Holyoke 6 Imperial 40 Steamboat Springs Trail Ridge Road Boyd Windsor 392 Merino Vernal Yampa R. Lake Drake Frenchman Creek 14 Loveland Greeley Jackson 52 Prewitt Res. 76 40 Rocky 34 Kersey Riverside Res. Estes Park Johnstown Evans Res. 131 125 Mountain NP Carter Milliken La Salle Log Lane Hilrose 13 Lake 34 Village 385 Morrison Creek 7 25 Gilcrest South Platte R. Green R. Dinosaur Oak Creek Grand Lake 36 Berthoud Empire 59 Milton Res. Brush Stagecoach Grand Lyons Mead Lake Lake Allenspark 85 Res. Wiggins 3 White R. Flat Tops Trail Res. South Platte R. 34 Akron Otis Granby 66 Platteville Fort Morgan Yuma 64 Peak to Peak Longmont 76 Eckley 64 Yampa Hot Sulphur 72 Frederick 34 134 Springs Highway Jamestown Fort Lupton White R. -
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2. Location Street & Number Bridge Street and County Road 402 Not for Publication City, Town Elk Mountain Vicinity of State Wyoming Code 056 County Carbon Code 007 3
NPS Form 10-900 (3-82) OMB No. 1024-0018 Expires 10-31-87 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service For NPS use only National Register of Historic Places received SEP I 0 Inventory Nomination Form date entered See instructions in How to Complete National Register Forms OCT | 0 1986 Type all entries complete applicable sections_______________ 1. Name historic John S. Evans Hotel: Mountain View Hotel: Grand view Hotel and or common Elk Mountain Hotel (preferred)________________ 2. Location street & number Bridge Street and County Road 402 not for publication city, town Elk Mountain vicinity of state Wyoming code 056 county Carbon code 007 3. Classification Category Ownership Status Present Use district rpublic X occupied agriculture museum X building(s) X private unoccupied X commercial park structure both work in progress educational private residence site Public Acquisition Accessible entertainment religious object n/a in process yes: restricted government scientific n/a being considered X,_ yes: unrestricted industrial transportation no military Other; 4. Owner of Property name c.H. and S.P. Martin street & number Elk Mountain Hotel Box 76 city, town Elk Mountain vicinity of state Wyoming 5. Location of Legal Description courthouse, registry of deeds, etc. Carbon County Courthouse street & number 4th and Spruce city, town Rawlins state Wyoming 6. Representation in Existing Surveys title University of Wyo. History Class has this property been determined eligible? yes no date 1984 federal state county X local depository for survey records Sl-ai-P ir. Preservation Office city, town Cheyenne state Wyoming 7. Description Condition Check one Check one excellent deteriorated unaltered X original3 site / ruins X altered moved date n/a X fair unexposed Describe ;thf present and original (if known) physical appearance Located on their original sites on the eastern side of the community, the Elk Mountain Hotel and Garden Spot Pavilion are physically separated by a tree filled grassy area that has long functioned as the town's park. -
Pronghorn 2020 Post-Hunt Population Estimates
very year, Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s (CPW) winter survival rates of newborn animals, overall herd size and big-game biologists compile data on the state’s deer, health. The information is collected throughout the entire winter elk and pronghorn herds by data analysis units and summer range of each herd, and used in models to estimate (DAU). These DAUs encompass several of the population size and trends, and to establish annual hunting quotas game management units (GMU) that hunters are for the GMUs. more familiar with. Hunters may increase their odds for a successful Colorado hunt EThe reports include data on male-to-female ratios, birth and by adding this tool to their individual hunt-planning database. PRONGHORN 2020 POST-HUNT POPULATION ESTIMATES Post-Hunt DAU Herd Name Game Management Units (GMUs) Population Buck / Doe Ratio / 100 A-1 Escarpment 87, 88, 89, 90, 94, 95, 951 8,890 54 A-2 Hardpan 99, 100 1,690 29 A-3 North Park 6, 16, 17, 161, 171 1,500 43 A-4 Sandhills 93, 97, 98, 101, 102 640 16 A-5 Haswell 120, 121, 125, 126 3,050 40 A-6 Hugo 112, 113, 114, 115 2,800 21 A-7 Thatcher 128, 129, 133, 134, 135, 140, 141, 142, 147 10,150 39 A-8 Yoder 110, 111, 118, 119, 123, 124 10,100 55 A-9 Great Divide 3, 4, 5, 13, 14, 214, 301, 441 18,990 39 A-10 Maybell 11 470 22 A-11 Sand Wash 1, 2, 201 1,420 41 A-12 Cheyenne 116, 117, 122, 127 1,350 38 A-13 Tobe 130, 136, 137, 138, 143, 144, 146 3,060 20 A-14 San Luis Valley - North 68, 79, 82, 681, 682, 791 1,460 16 A-16 San Luis Valley - South 80, 81, 83 1,170 32 A-18 Two Buttes 132,139,145