Skip to main content
Advanced Search

Filters: Tags: Pinedale (X)

30 results (165ms)   

View Results as: JSON ATOM CSV
The Platte Valley Herd Corridor was designated by the Wyoming Game and Fish Department in 2018 (fig. 30). The Platte Valley herd contains approximately 11,000 mule deer. The corridor is based on two wintering populations, including a south segment from Saratoga, Wyoming, to the Colorado State line, and a north segment from Saratoga to the Dana Ridge area north of I-80. Winter ranges in the Platte Valley are more dispersed than winter ranges in other parts of the state, so deer migrate in many different directions. Many deer in the southern segment follow the Platte River south to summer ranges in Colorado. Most deer migrations in the north radiate south and east from winter ranges along I-80. The WGFD collared 45...
thumbnail
The floodplain maps utilized by HUD were digitized by PIC technologies when publishing the Pinedale Anticline Record of Decision. This area only covers the Pinedale Anticline.
thumbnail
This data represents grazing allotment boundaries managed by the BLM. Allotments are permitted use areas for public grazing of cattle, sheep and horses. Allotments can be a mixture of different surface ownerships, for example a BLM allotment can encompass privately owned land or state land Allotments can also be leased to various types of livestock, cattle, sheep and/or horses.
thumbnail
This data contains fences within the southwest portion of Wyoming at a 1:100,000 scale. A two and one-half year inventory of fences on federal lands was conducted by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) from 1990 to 1992. The attribute fields describe the type of fences, the 30 x 60- minute quadrangle map which they are found, the ownership of the land, the year the fence was built, and their location according to township, range and section.
The Ryegrass mule deer population is part of the larger Sublette herd that winters in the northwest portion of the Green River Basin, west of the Green River and north of Cottonwood Creek (fig. 34). In severe winters, these deer may travel southeast to The Mesa, Ross Ridge, or Reardon Draw areas. The Ryegrass region supports approximately 1,500 to 2,000 deer that migrate northwest to summer ranges in the Wyoming Range and Salt River Range. Many of these deer must traverse U.S. Highway 189, where deer-vehicle collisions are problematic. This stretch of highway is a top priority for underpass installation to improve both wildlife permeability and motorist safety. These data provide the location of migration routes...
thumbnail
Prairie dog towns were located for the Pinedale BLM Field Office by two different consultants in 1995, 1997 and 1998.
The Sublette herd is the largest moose population in Wyoming, numbering approximately 1,800 individuals. This herd winters among the willow-dominated floodplains of the Green River Basin, primarily the eastern foothills of the Wyoming Range; some animals winter also in the Hoback Basin. As a partially migratory population, approximately half of the moose are resident, while migratory individuals travel short distances (14 miles on average, max 45 miles) primarily to tributaries of the Green and Hoback rivers. During spring, most migration routes originate on private ranchlands within the expansive willow bottoms of Beaver, Horse, Cottonwood, and Piney Creeks, as well as the aspen-conifer forests of the Hoback Basin....
thumbnail
At times during the past two million years, glaciers formed in the mountainous part of the Platte River drainage basin. These glaceriers were predominantly valley glaciers, also commonly referred to a s mountain or alpine glaciers. by definition, valley glaciers flow through pre-existing valleys and are bounded by exposed bedrock. the deep valleys and canyons of the map area already existed at the beginning of the Ice Age as a result of regional uplift and subsequent erosion that occured from late Oligocene through Pliocene time. the largest valley glacier in the map area was 45 km long and as much as 600 m thick. During times when Pleistocene glaciers reached their maximum extent, about 10 percent of the mountainous...
thumbnail
The special management areas captured by this spatial data set are: Upper Green River special recreation management area and the Continental Divide snow machine trail (CDST) which is a 10 meter buffer of the actual trail.
thumbnail
No Surface Occupancy (NSO) is designated by the BLM to prevent surface disturbing activities from occurring in specific areas. The reasons may include but are not limited to wilderness areas, cultural artifacts or sensitive areas for wildlife. No surface disturbance of any kind is allowed.
thumbnail
The NNW-striking Madison fault zone is approximately 95 km in length, lying at the confluence of the northeast Basin and Range province and the Yellowstone tectonic parabola. The fault zone consists primarily of west-dipping normal faults with east-dipping antithetic faults, which create the Madison Valley graben and several northeast-trending intra-basin faults. The Madison fault zone (MFZ) and associated sections discussed herein refer to the main west-dipping, range-bounding fault along the eastern side of the valley. Detailed geologic mapping (1:12,000 scale) of the entire fault zone and fault scarp profiling (total of 102 profiles) of the MFZ reveal greater late Quaternary paleoseismic activity towards the...
Categories: Data; Tags: 1959 Hebgen Lake earthquake, American Geosciences Institute Glossary of Geology, Basin and Range province, Bear Creek, Beartrap Canyon, All tags...
thumbnail
Information details withdrawals in and around the Pinedale Bureau of Land Management (BLM) Field Office. Withdrawal (defined in CFR 43 Chapter II (10/01/01 Edition) 2300.0-5 page 78. Withdrawal means withholding an area of Federal land from settlement, sale, location, or entry under some or all of the general land laws, for the purpose of limiting activities under those laws in order to maintain other public values in the area or reserving the area for a particular public purpose or program; or transferring jurisdiction over an area of Federal land, other than property governed by the Federal Property and Administrative Services Act (40 U.S.C. 472), from one department, bureau or agency to another department, bureau...
thumbnail
This data depicts range improvement projects (RIP) on BLM land in the Pinedale Field Office including type of project, located and date constructed or implemented. This data does not address condition of RIP. These projects are constructed with the objective of improving rangelands through the proper distribution of livestock.
thumbnail
These are areas of special management within the Pinedale BLM Field Office. These areas are treated differently than other areas with special consideration. These areas do not fit in other management categories such as Areas of Critical Environmental Concern (ACEC), Wilderness Study Areas (WSA) or Special Recreation Management Areas (SRMA).


map background search result map search result map Campgrounds for the BLM Pinedale Field Office, Wyoming at 1:100,000 Special Management Areas - Recreation for the BLM Pinedale Field Office, Wyoming at 1:100,000 Range Improvement Projects for the BLM Pinedale Field Office, Wyoming No Surface Occupancy for the BLM Pinedale Field Office, Wyoming at 1:100,000 Special Managment Areas for the BLM Pinedale Field Office, Wyoming at 1:100,000 Grazing Allotments for the BLM Pinedale Field Office, Wyoming at 1:100,000 Floodprone Areas 100-year (Zone A) for the BLM Pinedale Field Office, Wyoming at 1:100,000 Floodplains for the BLM Pinedale Field Office, Wyoming at 1:100,000 Fences of Southwest Wyoming at 1:100,000 Land Withdrawals for the BLM Pinedale Field Office, Wyoming at 1:24,000 Prairie Dog Towns for the BLM Pinedale Field Office, Wyoming at 1:24,000 USGS 1:24000-scale Quadrangle for Pinedale, WY 1964 USGS 1:24000-scale Quadrangle for Pinedale, WY 1964 USGS 1:24000-scale Quadrangle for Pinedale, AZ 1970 USGS 1:24000-scale Quadrangle for Pinedale, AZ 1970 Migration Routes of Moose in the Pinedale Herd in Wyoming Migration Routes of Mule Deer in the Ryegrass Population in Wyoming Migration Stopovers (WGFD) of Mule Deer in the Sublette Herd in Wyoming Data Release - Pleistocene Glaciation in the Upper Platte River Drainage Basin, Colorado Data Release for Surficial Geology and Quaternary Tectonics of the Madison Valley and Fault Zone, Madison, Gallatin, and Beaverhead Counties, southwest Montana USGS 1:24000-scale Quadrangle for Pinedale, WY 1964 USGS 1:24000-scale Quadrangle for Pinedale, WY 1964 USGS 1:24000-scale Quadrangle for Pinedale, AZ 1970 USGS 1:24000-scale Quadrangle for Pinedale, AZ 1970 Floodplains for the BLM Pinedale Field Office, Wyoming at 1:100,000 Data Release for Surficial Geology and Quaternary Tectonics of the Madison Valley and Fault Zone, Madison, Gallatin, and Beaverhead Counties, southwest Montana Campgrounds for the BLM Pinedale Field Office, Wyoming at 1:100,000 Special Management Areas - Recreation for the BLM Pinedale Field Office, Wyoming at 1:100,000 Migration Routes of Moose in the Pinedale Herd in Wyoming No Surface Occupancy for the BLM Pinedale Field Office, Wyoming at 1:100,000 Special Managment Areas for the BLM Pinedale Field Office, Wyoming at 1:100,000 Range Improvement Projects for the BLM Pinedale Field Office, Wyoming Floodprone Areas 100-year (Zone A) for the BLM Pinedale Field Office, Wyoming at 1:100,000 Data Release - Pleistocene Glaciation in the Upper Platte River Drainage Basin, Colorado Grazing Allotments for the BLM Pinedale Field Office, Wyoming at 1:100,000 Migration Routes of Mule Deer in the Ryegrass Population in Wyoming Prairie Dog Towns for the BLM Pinedale Field Office, Wyoming at 1:24,000 Migration Stopovers (WGFD) of Mule Deer in the Sublette Herd in Wyoming Land Withdrawals for the BLM Pinedale Field Office, Wyoming at 1:24,000 Fences of Southwest Wyoming at 1:100,000