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Last modified
1/26/2010 3:14:17 PM
Creation date
10/12/2006 4:27:49 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Water Supply Protection
File Number
8270.100
Description
Colorado River Basin Water Quality/Salinity -- Misc Water Quality
Basin
Colorado Mainstem
Water Division
5
Date
1/1/1971
Author
USDOI
Title
Quality of Water - Colorado River Basin - Progress Report No. 5 - January 1971
Water Supply Pro - Doc Type
Report/Study
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<br />DESCRIPrION OF BASIN <br /> <br />Q <br />~ <br />"'1 Scattered cottonwoods and chokecherries grow in the canyons with the <br />en cliff rose, the redbud, and blue columbine. A profusion of wildflo~ers <br />carpets many mountain parks. At lower elevations large areas are almost <br />completely devoid of plant life while other sections are sprinkled with <br />desert shrubs, Joshua trees, other Yucca plants, and saguaro cacti, some <br />of the latter giant plants reaching 40 feet in height. Occasionally, <br />cottonwoods or desert willows are found along desert streams with mes- <br />quite and creosote bush or catclaw and paloverde. In recent years many <br />river channels have been overrun with tamarisk or salt cedar to the ex- <br />tent that a large volume of water is being consumed by such vegetation. <br />Measures are being taken to curb the growth of phreatophytes to conserve <br />water. <br /> <br />E. Hydrology <br /> <br />The Colorado River begins where peaks rise more than 14,000 feet <br />high in the n::Jrthwest portion of Colorado I s Rocky Mountain National Park, <br />70 miles northwest of Denver. It meanders southwest for 640 miles through <br />the Upper Basin to Lee Ferryo The Green River, its major tributary, rises <br />in western Wyoming and discharges into the Colorado River in southeastern <br />Utah--730 river miles south of its origin and 220 miles above Lee Ferry. <br />The Green River drains 70 percent m::J;ce area than the Colorado River above <br />their junction but produces only about three-fourths as much water. The <br />Gunnison and the San Juan are the other principal tributaries of the Upper <br />Colorado River. <br /> <br />The flows of the Sa'1 Juan River are now controlled by the Navajo Dam, <br />the Green River by Fontenelle and Flaming Gorge Da'1ls, ani the Gunnison <br />River by the Curecanti Unit Dams. Glen Canyon Dam is the only major dam <br />on the main stem of the Colorado above Lee Ferry, but it will permit con- <br />trol of almost all flows leaving the Upper Basin. <br /> <br />The floN at vario~s points in streams in the Colorado River Basin <br />for the 1941-68 period is given in Tables 1 through 17. Tne records of <br />flow depict the characteristic wide fluctuations from month-to-month and <br />the considerable variation from year-to-year. The recently constructed <br />storage reservoirs will now level out Some of these fluctuations. <br /> <br />The natural drainage area of the lower C6\orado River below Lee Ferry <br />and above Imperial Dam is ab::Jut 75,100 square miles. This section of the <br />rive~ is n::Jw largely controlled by a series of storage and diversion dams <br />starting with Hoover Dam and ending at Imperial Dam. <br /> <br />At the present time there is no significant storage on the main river <br />or on the tributaries between Glen Canyon Da'll and Lake Mead. The interven- <br />ing tributary inflow is erratic but amounts to almost enough to offset the <br />evaporatio:l from Lake Mead. <br /> <br />10 <br /> <br />
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