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18 <br /> 0 <br /> O <br /> the capacity of the stream at the time that these studies <br /> were made, which was during the period approximately say =' <br /> from 1932 to about 1934, that the capacities of the channel <br /> 0 <br /> in Western Kansas are given as Syracuse, 8000 cubic feet <br /> r <br /> per second; Garden City, 7000 cubic feet per second; and <br /> Lamed, 6000 cubic feet per second. Above there, as I < <br /> recall-- <br /> MR. VIDAL: You didn't read Dodge City. <br /> MR. KNAPP: No, I didn't read Dodge City, and for the <br /> reason that I wanted to deal particularly with these three <br /> stations-- <br /> MR. VIDAL: Pardon rye. <br /> MR. XN, PP: --where the State of Kansas in cooperation <br /> with the United States Geological purvey has maintained <br /> gaging stations-- <br /> 11R. VIDAL: Pardon my interruption. <br /> MR. KNAPP: --and made discharge measurements which re- <br /> veal the relationship between such a discharge over the <br /> period from 1921 down to 1934. <br /> Now, those are the capacities at those three points where <br /> there is available year by year published gage heights and <br /> discharges. Above there in Colorado, as I recall , this House <br /> Document gives a stage capacity of 13,000 cubic feet per <br /> second at Lamar and down below this section 12,000 cubic feet <br />