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<br />in the Colorado portion of the study area. In more recent years, <br />growth in the Colorado portion, especially the Denver metropolitan <br />area, has heavily infl uenced the overall growth rate for the study <br />area. Table 1 shows the 1930-1978 population figures for each state <br />portion of the study area and the entire Upper Platte River Basin. <br /> <br />Table 1.--Population in Upper Platte River Basin 1930-1978 <br />Sub are a 193ol/ 194o.!.; 195o.!.; 196o.!.; 197o.!.; 197!0 <br />Wyoming 103,143 110,950 140,388 171,501 170,718 219,435 <br />Colorado 781,195 619,604 789,785 1,125,508 1,480,306 1,814,100 <br />Nebraska 222,852 223,716 233,629 244,674 254,070 270,582 <br />Total study area 1,107,190 954,270 1,163,802 1,541,683 1,905,094 2,304,117 <br /> <br />.!J Taken from "Number of Inhabitants," Census of Popul ation, <br />U.S. Bureau of Census. <br /> <br />'Y Taken from: Wyomi ng Popul ation and Employment Forecast, State of <br />Wyoming, June 1979. Colorado Population Reports, Colorado Division <br />of Pl anning, Colorado, August 1979. University of Nebraska News, <br />Bureau of Business Research, Lincoln, Nebraska, June 1979. <br /> <br />The annual growth rate for the Upper Platte River Basin is 1.54 percent <br />for the 4g-year period. For the three subareas, Wyoming, Colorado, and <br />Nebraska, the annual growth rates are 1.59, 1. 77, and 0.41 percent, <br />respectively. <br /> <br />The influence of the Denver metropolitan area can be seen in the 1978 <br />population figures. Of the 2,304,117 persons in the study area, more <br />than 1,500,000 resided in the Denver metropolitan area. Other urban <br />concentrations include Fort Collins and Greeley, Colorado; Cheyenne and <br />Casper, Wyoming; and Grand Island, Nebraska. These communities in <br />1978 had a combined popul ation of nearly 379,000. They, together with <br />the Denver metropolitan area, include approximately 82 percent of the <br />total population in the Upper Platte River Basin. <br /> <br />Energy resources development and its support functions have been <br />instrumental in some substantial increases in population growth <br />since 1970. Most of these have occurred in the greater Denver area <br />and the energy resource areas of Wyomi ng, such as Casper. With the <br /> <br />7 <br />