Natural Resources
Conservation Service
Major Land Resource Area 047X
Major Land Resource Area
Accessed: 04/20/2026
Description
MLRA 47 occurs in Utah (86 percent), Wyoming (8 percent), Colorado (4 percent), and Idaho (2 percent). It encompasses approximately 23,825 square miles (61,740 square kilometers). The northern half of this area is in the Middle Rocky Mountains Province of the Rocky Mountain System. The southern half is in the High Plateaus of the Utah Section of the Colorado Plateaus Province of the Intermontane Plateaus. Parts of the western edge of this MLRA are in the Great Basin Section of the Basin and Range Province of the Intermontane Plateaus. The MLRA includes the Wasatch Mountains, which trend north and south, and the Unita Mountains, which trend east and west. The steeply sloping, precipitous Wasatch Mountains have narrow crests and deep valleys. Active faulting and erosion are a dominant force in controlling the geomorphology of the area. The Uinta Mountains have a broad, gently arching, elongated shape. Structurally, they consist of a broadly folded anticline that has an erosion-resistant quartzite core. The Wasatch and Uinta Mountains have an elevation of 4,900 to about 13,500 feet (1,495 to 4,115 meters). The mountains in this area are primarily fault blocks that have been tilted up. Alluvial fans at the base of the mountains are recharge zones for the basin fill aquifers. An ancient shoreline of historic Bonneville Lake is evident on the footslopes along the western edge of the area. Rocks exposed in the mountains are mostly Mesozoic and Paleozoic sediments, but Precambrian rocks are exposed in the Uinta Mountains. The Uinta Mountains are one of the few ranges in the United States that are oriented west to east. The southern Wasatch Mountains consist of Tertiary volcanic rocks occurring as extrusive lava and intrusive crystalline rocks. The average precipitation is from 8 to 16 inches (203 to 406 mm) in the valleys and can range up to 73 inches (1854 mm) in the mountains. In the northern and western portions of the MLRA, peak precipitation occurs in the winter months. The southern and eastern portions have a greater incidence of high-intensity summer thunderstorms; hence, a significant amount of precipitation occurs during the summer months. The average annual temperature is 30 to 50 degrees F (-1 to 15 C). The freeze-free period averages 140 days and ranges from 60 to 220 days, generally decreasing in length with elevation. The dominant soil orders in this MLRA are Aridisols, Entisols, Inceptisols, and Mollisols. The lower elevations are dominated by a frigid temperature regime, while the higher elevations experience cryic temperature regimes. Mesic temperature regimes come in on the lower elevations and south facing slopes in the southern portion of this MLRA. The soil moisture regime is typically xeric in the northern part of the MLRA, but grades to ustic in the extreme eastern and southern parts. The minerology is generally mixed and the soils are very shallow to very deep, generally well drained, and loamy or loamy –skeletal.
Key publications
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Ecological site list
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ProvisionalR047XA004UT/R047XA004UTInterzonal Cold Semi-wet Fresh Meadow (meadow sedge/tufted hairgrass)
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ProvisionalR047XB345UT/R047XB345UTUpland Very Steep Shallow Loam (pinyon/Utah juniper/Douglas-fir)
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Ecological site map
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Ecological sites
Major Land Resource Areas
Ecological site photos
Filters
F047XA610UT – Subalpine Gravelly Loam (subalpine fir/Engelmann spruce)
R047XA611UT – Subalpine Clay Loam (mixed grasses/forbs)
R047XA624UT – Subalpine Semiwet Meadow (tufted hairgrass)
R047XA660UT – Subalpine Wet Meadow (sedge)
R047XA630UT – Subalpine Stony Loam (snowfield sagebrush)
R047XA614UT – Subalpine Loam (cranesbill)
R047XA620UT – Subalpine Meadow (alpine timothy)
F047XA542UT – High Mountain Stony Sandy Loam (lodgepole pine)
R047XA557UT – High Mountain Gravelly Loam (tall forb)
R047XA504UT – High Mountain Clay (slender wheatgrass)
F047XA508UT – High Mountain Loam (quaking aspen)
R047XA516UT – High Mountain Loam (mountain big sagebrush)
R047XA528UT – High Mountain Stony Clay (slender wheatgrass)
F047XA533UT – High Mountain Stony Loam (mixed conifer)
R047XA516UT – High Mountain Loam (mountain big sagebrush)
R047XA574UT – High mountain windswept ridge (fringed sagewort)
R047XA530UT – High Mountain Gravelly Loam (subalpine big sagebrush)
R047XA525UT – High Mountain Shallow Loam (low sagebrush)
R047XA526UT – High Mountain Shallow Loam (Douglas-fir)
F047XA531UT – High Mountain Stony Loam (quaking aspen)
R047XA510UT – High Mountain Loam (bigtooth maple)
R047XY010ID – High Mountain Loam 25-35 PZ ACSAG2/PHMA5/BRCA5
F047XA512UT – High Mountain Loam (Douglas-fir)
F047XA533UT – High Mountain Stony Loam (mixed conifer)
R047XA516UT – High Mountain Loam (mountain big sagebrush)
R047XA510UT – High Mountain Loam (bigtooth maple)
R047XY010ID – High Mountain Loam 25-35 PZ ACSAG2/PHMA5/BRCA5
F047XA532UT – High Mountain Stony Loam (Douglas-fir)
R047XA560UT – High Mountain Gravelly Loam (mountain big sagebrush)
R047XA458UT – Mountain Stony Loam (quaking aspen thicket)
R047XA402UT – Mountain Clay (slender wheatgrass)
R047XA418UT – Mountain Loam (bigtooth maple)
R047XY009ID – Mountain Loam 18-22 PZ ACGRG/ARTRV/PSSP6
R047XA408UT – Mountain Gravelly Loam (Douglas-fir)
R047XA416UT – Mountain Loamy Bottom (basin big sagebrush)
R047XA430UT – Mountain Loam (mountain big sagebrush)
R047XA406UT – Mountain Gravelly Loam (mountain big sagebrush)
R047XA432UT – Mountain Loam (oak)
R047XA434UT – Mountain Loam (shrub)
R047XA475UT – Mountain Windswept Ridge (black sagebrush)
R047XA471UT – Mountain Very Steep Stony Loam (oak)
R047XA463UT – Mountain Stony Loam (Gambel oak)
R047XA456UT – Mountain Stony Loam (antelope bitterbrush)
R047XA434UT – Mountain Loam (shrub)
R047XA410UT – Mountain Gravelly Loam (oak)
R047XA465UT – Mountain Stony Loam (Rocky Mountain juniper)
R047XA438UT – Mountain Shallow Loam (black sagebrush)
R047XA461UT – Mountain Stony Loam (mountain big sagebrush)
R047XA473UT – Mountain Very Steep Stony Loam (browse)
R047XA456UT – Mountain Stony Loam (antelope bitterbrush)
R047XA460UT – Mountain Stony Loam (browse)
R047XA454UT – Mountain Stony Clay (slender wheatgrass)
R047XA474UT – Mountain Very Steep Stony Loam (mountain big sagebrush)
R047XA461UT – Mountain Stony Loam (mountain big sagebrush)
R047XA442UT – Mountain Shallow Loam (low sagebrush)
R047XA469UT – Mountain Very Steep Shallow Loam (mountain big sagebrush)
R047XA476UT – Mountain Windswept Ridge (low sagebrush)
R047XA446UT – Mountain Shallow Loam (mountain big sagebrush)
R047XA440UT – Mountain Shallow Loam (curl-leaf mountain mahogany)
R047XA448UT – Mountain Shallow Loam (oak)
R047XA332UT – Upland Stony Loam (black sagebrush)
R047XA334UT – Upland Stony Loam (mountain big sagebrush)
R047XA308UT – Upland Loam (basin big sagebrush)
R047XA338UT – Upland Stony Loam (Wyoming big sagebrush)
R047XA305UT – Upland Stony Loam (Utah juniper)
R047XA325UT – Upland Loamy Shale (low sagebrush)
R047XA321UT – Upland Shallow Loam (Utah juniper)
R047XA320UT – Upland Shallow Loam (Wyoming big sagebrush)
R047XA316UT – Upland Shallow Loam (black sagebrush)
R047XA306UT – Upland Gravelly Loam (Bonneville big sagebrush)
R047XA336UT – Upland Stony Loam (pinyon/Utah juniper)
R047XA302UT – Upland Clay (low sagebrush)
R047XA309UT – Upland Loam (birchleaf mountain mahogany)
R047XA301UT – Upland Clay Loam (early sagebrush)
R047XA310UT – Upland Loam (basin wildrye)
R047XA008UT – Interzonal Wet Fresh Meadow (sedge)
R047XA010UT – Interzonal Wet Fresh Streambank (willow)
R047XA016UT – Loamy Bottom (basin wildrye)
R047XA004UT – Interzonal Cold Semi-wet Fresh Meadow (meadow sedge/tufted hairgrass)
R047XA002UT – Semi-moist Streambank (narrowleaf cottonwood)
R047XA006UT – Semi-wet Fresh Streambank (narrowleaf cottonwood)
R047XB236UT – Semidesert Shallow Loam (black sagebrush)
R047XB214UT – Semidesert Gravelly Loam (Wyoming big sagebrush)
R047XB222UT – Semidesert Loam (Wyoming big sagebrush)
R047XB244UT – Semidesert Silt Loam (winterfat)
R047XB252UT – Semidesert Stony Loam (black sagebrush)
R047XB210UT – Semidesert Gravelly Loam (black sagebrush)
R047XB221UT – Semidesert Loam (black sagebrush)
R047XB220UT – Semidesert Loam (basin big sagebrush)
R047XB333UT – Upland Stony Loam (pinyon/Utah juniper)
R047XB312UT – Upland Shallow Clay (pinyon/Utah juniper)
R047XB322UT – Upland Shallow Loam (mountain big sagebrush)
R047XB326UT – Upland Shallow Loam (pinyon/Utah juniper)
R047XB332UT – Upland Stony Loam (black sagebrush)
R047XB345UT – Upland Very Steep Shallow Loam (pinyon/Utah juniper/Douglas-fir)
R047XB326UT – Upland Shallow Loam (pinyon/Utah juniper)
R047XB316UT – Upland Shallow Hardpan (black sagebrush)
R047XB318UT – Upland Shallow Hardpan (pinyon/Utah juniper)
R047XB316UT – Upland Shallow Hardpan (black sagebrush)
R047XB301UT – Upland Clay (black sagebrush)
R047XB303UT – Upland Clay (pinyon/Utah juniper)
R047XB301UT – Upland Clay (black sagebrush)
R047XB308UT – Upland Loam (mountain big sagebrush/Indian ricegrass)
R047XB306UT – Upland Gravelly Loam (black sagebrush)
R047XB336UT – Upland Stony Loam (mountain big sagebrush)
R047XB309UT – Upland Loam (black sagebrush)
R047XB310UT – Upland Loam (shrub)
R047XB332UT – Upland Stony Loam (black sagebrush)
R047XB333UT – Upland Stony Loam (pinyon/Utah juniper)
R047XB304UT – Upland Gravelly Loam (pinyon/Utah juniper)
R047XB332UT – Upland Stony Loam (black sagebrush)
R047XB462UT – Mountain Stony Loam (mountain big sagebrush)
R047XB463UT – Mountain Stony Loam (oak)
R047XB406UT – Mountain Gravelly Loam (mountain big sagebrush)
R047XB410UT – Mountain Gravelly Loam (oak)
R047XB430UT – Mountain Loam (mountain big sagebrush)
R047XB463UT – Mountain Stony Loam (oak)
R047XB463UT – Mountain Stony Loam (oak)
R047XB420UT – Mountain Loam (shrub)
R047XB430UT – Mountain Loam (mountain big sagebrush)
R047XB432UT – Mountain Loam (oak)
R047XB433UT – Mountain Loam (ponderosa pine)
R047XB428UT – Mountain Loam (low sagebrush)
R047XB432UT – Mountain Loam (oak)
R047XB420UT – Mountain Loam (shrub)
R047XB426UT – Mountain Loam (black sagebrush)
R047XB430UT – Mountain Loam (mountain big sagebrush)
R047XB420UT – Mountain Loam (shrub)
R047XB442UT – Mountain Shallow Loam (low sagebrush)
R047XB438UT – Mountain Shallow Loam (black sagebrush)
R047XB438UT – Mountain Shallow Loam (black sagebrush)
R047XB450UT – Mountain Shallow Loam (ponderosa pine)
R047XB440UT – Mountain Shallow Loam (curl-leaf mountain mahogany)
R047XB468UT – Mountain Very Steep Shallow Loam (curl-leaf mountain mahogany)
R047XB446UT – Mountain Shallow Loam (mountain big sagebrush)
R047XB442UT – Mountain Shallow Loam (low sagebrush)
R047XB420UT – Mountain Loam (shrub)
R047XB430UT – Mountain Loam (mountain big sagebrush)
R047XB475UT – Mountain Windswept Ridge (black sagebrush or low sagebrush)
R047XB433UT – Mountain Loam (ponderosa pine)
R047XB428UT – Mountain Loam (low sagebrush)
R047XB508UT – High Mountain Loam (aspen)
F047XB512UT – High Mountain Loam (Douglas-fir)
R047XB516UT – High Mountain Loam (mountain big sagebrush)
R047XB519UT – High Mountain Loam (mixed conifer)
R047XB532UT – High Mountain Stony Loam (Douglas-fir)
R047XB539UT – High Mountain Stony Loam (mixed conifer)
R047XC006UT – Semi-wet Fresh Streambank (narrowleaf cottonwood)
R047XC004UT – Semi-wet Fresh Meadow
R047XC008UT – Wet Fresh Meadow (sedge)
R047XC016UT – Loamy Bottom (basin big sagebrush)
R047XC007UT – Semi-moist Stream Terrace (ponderosa pine)
R047XC003UT – Interzonal Semi-wet Streambank (narrowleaf cottonwood)
R047XC309UT – Upland Loam (birchleaf mountain mahogany)
R047XC310UT – Upland Loam (mountain big sagebrush)
R047XC340UT – Upland Very Steep Stony Loam (pinyon/Utah juniper)
R047XC332UT – Upland Stony Loam (black sagebrush)
R047XC336UT – Upland Stony Loam (Bonneville big sagebrush)
R047XC339UT – Upland Stony Loam (shrub)
R047XC312UT – Upland Loam (shrub)
R047XC311UT – Upland Loam (black sagebrush)
R047XC320UT – Upland Shallow Loam (black sagebrush)
R047XC326UT – Upland Shallow Loam (pinyon/Utah juniper)
R047XC302UT – Upland Clay (black sagebrush)
R047XC338UT – Upland Stony Loam (Wyoming big sagebrush)
R047XC335UT – Upland Stony Loam (pinyon/Utah juniper)
R047XC308UT – Upland Loam (Wyoming big sagebrush)
R047XC462UT – Mountain Stony Loam (mountain big sagebrush)
R047XC456UT – Mountain Stony Loam (antelope bitterbrush)
F047XC458UT – Mountain Stony Loam (quaking aspen thicket)
R047XC461UT – Mountain Stony Loam (curl-leaf mountain mahogany)
R047XY378CO – Mountain Stony Loam
F047XC405UT – Mountain Cobbly Sandy Loam (ponderosa pine)
R047XC404UT – Mountain Clay (silver sagebrush)
R047XC430UT – Mountain Loam (mountain big sagebrush)
R047XY247CO – Deep Clay Loam
R047XC460UT – Mountain Stony Loam (shrub)
F047XC405UT – Mountain Cobbly Sandy Loam (ponderosa pine)
R047XC461UT – Mountain Stony Loam (curl-leaf mountain mahogany)
R047XY378CO – Mountain Stony Loam
R047XC474UT – Mountain Very Steep Stony Loam (shrub)
R047XC472UT – Mountain Very Steep Stony Loam (bitterbrush)
R047XC478UT – Mountain Windswept Ridge (mountain big sagebrush)
R047XC476UT – Mountain Windswept Ridge (low sagebrush)
R047XC475UT – Mountain Windswept Ridge (black sagebrush)
R047XC446UT – Mountain Shallow Loam (mountain big sagebrush)
R047XC453UT – Mountain Shallow Sandy Loam (ponderosa pine)
F047XC508UT – High Mountain Loam (quaking aspen)
R047XC510UT – High Mountain Stony Loam (mountain big sagebrush)
F047XC542UT – High Mountain Stony Sandy Loam (lodgepole pine)
F047XC520UT – High Mountain Stony Loam (mixed conifer)
F047XC531UT – High Mountain Stony Loam (quaking aspen)
F047XC512UT – High Mountain Stony Loam (Douglas-fir)
F047XC541UT – High Mountain Very Steep Stony Loam (Douglas-fir)
Long term average mean annual precipitation
- No filter
- 25 – 30cm (10 – 12in)
- 30 – 35cm (12 – 14in)
- 35 – 40cm (14 – 16in)
- 40 – 50cm (16 – 20in)
- 50 – 60cm (20 – 24in)
- 60 – 80cm (24 – 31in)
- 80 – 100cm (31 – 39in)
- 100 – 120cm (39 – 47in)
- 120 – 140cm (47 – 55in)
Long term average frost free days
- No filter
- 0 – 30days
- 30 – 50days
- 50 – 70days
- 70 – 90days
- 90 – 110days
- 110 – 130days
- 130 – 150days
- 150 – 170days
- 170 – 190days
- 190 – 210days
- No filter
- 1200 – 1400m (3900 – 4600ft)
- 1400 – 1600m (4600 – 5200ft)
- 1600 – 1800m (5200 – 5900ft)
- 1800 – 2000m (5900 – 6600ft)
- 2000 – 2200m (6600 – 7200ft)
- 2200 – 2400m (7200 – 7900ft)
- 2400 – 2600m (7900 – 8500ft)
- 2600 – 2800m (8500 – 9800ft)
- 2800 – 3000m (9800 – 26240ft)
- 3000 – 8000m
- No filter
- 0 – 3%
- 3 – 5%
- 5 – 10%
- 10 – 15%
- 15 – 20%
- 20 – 25%
- 25 – 30%
- 30 – 35%
- 35 – 40%
- 40 – 45%
- 45 – 50%
- 50 – 60%
- 60 – 70%
- 70 – 80%
- 80 – 90%
- 90 – 100%
- No filter
- Alluvial fan
- Alluvial flat
- Bayou
- Breaks
- Canyon
- Channel
- Drainageway
- Escarpment
- Fan
- Fan piedmont
- Fan remnant
- Fan terrace
- Fen
- Flood plain
- Flood-plain step
- Ground moraine
- Hill
- Hillslope
- Kettle
- Lake terrace
- Landslide
- Lateral moraine
- Lava flow
- Ledge
- Mesa
- Moraine
- Mountain
- Mountain slope
- Mountain valley
- Mountainside
- Outwash fan
- Outwash plain
- Outwash terrace
- Pediment
- Plateau
- Ridge
- Scarp slope
- Slump block
- Spur
- Strath terrace
- Stream terrace
- Structural bench
- Swale
- Terrace
- Till plain
- Valley
- Valley flat
- Valley floor
- Valley side
- No filter
- Andesite
- Basalt
- Conglomerate, calcareous
- Conglomerate, unspecified
- Dacite
- Igneous and metamorphic
- Igneous and sedimentary
- Igneous, metamorphic and sedimentary
- Igneous, unspecified
- Limestone and sandstone
- Limestone and shale
- Limestone, sandstone and shale
- Limestone, unspecified
- Metamorphic and sedimentary
- Metamorphic, unspecified
- Quartz-diorite
- Quartzite
- Rhyolite
- Sandstone and shale
- Sandstone and siltstone
- Sandstone, calcareous
- Sandstone, unspecified
- Sedimentary, unspecified
- Shale and siltstone
- Shale, calcareous
- Shale, unspecified
- Siltstone, unspecified
- Tuff, unspecified
- Volcanic and sedimentary
- No filter
- Alluvium
- Colluvium
- Eolian deposits
- Glaciofluvial deposits
- Outwash
- Residuum
- Slope alluvium
- Till, unspecified
Soil surface texture
- No filter
- Clay
- Clay loam
- Coarse sandy loam
- Fine sandy loam
- Loam
- Loamy sand
- Sand
- Sandy clay loam
- Silty clay
- Silty clay loam
- Silt loam
- Sandy loam
- Very fine sandy loam
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Ecological site keys
The Ecosystem Dynamics Interpretive Tool is an information system framework developed by the USDA-ARS Jornada Experimental Range, USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service, and New Mexico State University.
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