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African rue is listed as a noxious weed in both Arizona and New Mexico. This field guide serves as the U.S. Forest Service’s recommendations for management of African rue in forests, woodlands, and rangelands associated with the Service’s Southwestern Region.

Often as a result of large-scale military maneuvers in the past, many soils in the Mojave Desert are highly vulnerable to soil compaction, particularly when wet. Previous studies indicate that natural recovery of severely compacted desert soils is extremely slow, and some researchers have suggested that subsurface compaction may not recover.

This dissertation employed a novel interdisciplinary approach to address those research unknowns through investigations of the micromorphological structure, soil-geomorphic relationships, and biogeochemical feedbacks of BSCs in the Mojave Desert.

Background information on subsidence in Arizona, followed by a summary of the potential volumes of water to be withdrawn by Resolution Copper at the Desert Wellfield and current and historic water levels at the Desert Wellfield. Potential subsidence is estimated from the proposed water withdrawal based on observed subsidence in the Hawk Rock Area, which is located northwest of the Desert Wellfield.

This catalog has been prepared to summarize available information for selected springs and seeps in the Upper Queen Creek, Devils Canyon, Mineral Creek, and Dripping Springs Wash watersheds.

Air Emissions Factors and Quantification, Chapter 13: Miscellaneous Sources

The purpose of this process memorandum is to describe the process by which the proposed project and alternatives were reviewed for consistency with the 1985 forest plan.

This technical memo addresses three specific questions raised by reviewers of the subsidence analysis in a March 2018 meeting.