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          THE COUNTY’S NATURAL ENVIRONMENT
        
        
          PLANNING ISSUE
        
        
          Soil erosion reduces soil
        
        
          fertility and adds to stream
        
        
          sediment pollution.
        
        
          What’s New
        
        
          •
        
        
          The new web-based Montgomery County soil
        
        
          survey provides a variety of tools to enable a user to
        
        
          better understand local soil conditions and create
        
        
          various reports.
        
        
          •
        
        
          The Pennsylvania Erosion and Sediment Control
        
        
          Manual was comprehensively revised in 2012 to
        
        
          address sediment based pollution control.
        
        
          •
        
        
          Development projects between 1 and 5 acres that
        
        
          were begun after 2010, now must receive an
        
        
          NPDES permit.
        
        
          •
        
        
          Six of the 11 streams in the county that have Total
        
        
          Maximum Daily Loads established since 2000 are
        
        
          impaired as a result of siltation.
        
        
          Geology
        
        
          Climate
        
        
          Hydrology
        
        
          Floodplains
        
        
          Air Quality
        
        
          Steep Slopes
        
        
          Soils
        
        
          Wetlands
        
        
          Woodlands
        
        
          Wildlife
        
        
          Natural Areas Inventory
        
        
          Soils
        
        
          Soils are a natural assortment of organic materials and
        
        
          mineral fragments which support plant life.  The
        
        
          composition of soils changes slowly over time due to
        
        
          weathering of rock and the activity of soil organisms.  As a
        
        
          consequence, soils differ in their color, mineral
        
        
          characteristics, fertility, texture, erodability, and depth to
        
        
          bedrock and groundwater.  Soil scientists have classified
        
        
          soils found in Montgomery County into several groups
        
        
          called soil series. Soils listed within the same series have
        
        
          similar subsurface characteristics.  However, the surface
        
        
          characteristics of soils within a particular series can vary in
        
        
          slope, degree of erosion, size of stones, and other easily
        
        
          recognizable features.  In addition to these soil-mapping
        
        
          units, soils can be divided into prime and important
        
        
          agricultural soils, hydric soils, and alluvial soils.
        
        
          Prime and Important Agricultural Soils
        
        
          The agricultural potential of soil is determined by
        
        
          measuring fertility, depth to bedrock and groundwater,
        
        
          texture, erodability, and slope.  Based on these
        
        
          characteristics, soils are classified as prime farmland,
        
        
          farmland of statewide importance, and other land.  Prime
        
        
          farmland soils, which comprise 50,983 acres, are deep, well
        
        
          -drained, and moderately sloped soils that can support high
        
        
          yields of crops with little management.  Farmland of
        
        
          statewide importance includes soils that support cultivation
        
        
          but require careful crop management and includes about
        
        
          87,089 acres in the county.  The remaining soils are more
        
        
          suitable for pastures and woodlands.
        
        
          The major areas of prime agricultural soils are in the
        
        
          Skippack Creek Watershed, especially Worcester
        
        
          Township. Ironically, some of the best agricultural soils in
        
        
          the county are within the heavily developed areas along the
        
        
          Pennsylvania Turnpike.  Conversely, the western part of the
        
        
          county where most of the farms are located has a limited
        
        
          amount of prime agricultural soils.
        
        
          Hydric Soils
        
        
          Hydric soils are periodically wet soils, in an undrained
        
        
          condition, that often support the growth of wetland
        
        
          vegetation.  Since only some hydric soils are found in
        
        
          undrained conditions, not all hydric soils support wetland
        
        
          
            Fertile soil for farming is located throughout the county.