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<br />I <br />II <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br /> <br />STATE OF COLORADO <br /> <br />COLORADO WATER CONSERVATION BOARD <br /> <br />Department of Natural Resources <br /> <br />. <br /> <br />721 SIa1e CA/nlennlaJ BUIlding <br />1313 Sherman $lreel <br />Denver,~~ 80203 <br />Phone (303) 666-344' <br />FAX (303) 866-4047-' <br /> <br />Roy Romer <br />GoYOme< <br /> <br />Ken Sa!azBt <br />ExeaJll'le Dnaor. DNA <br /> <br />Oanes C. U1e. P.E <br />Dnaor, ewes <br /> <br />M E M 0 RAN DUM <br /> <br />TO: <br /> <br />Members, CWCB <br /> <br />FROM: <br /> <br />Daries C. Lile, Director <br /> <br />DATE: March 3, 1993 <br /> <br />SUBJECT: March 1, 1993 snowpack Report <br /> <br />Hopes for a good water year are well on the way. In fact, <br />some areas of the state are well above average, as depicted on the <br />attached map. <br /> <br />I requested that Larry Lang meet with the Snow Survey Unit of <br />the Soil Conservation Service to prepare a report for the Board <br />regarding the state's March 1, 1993 snowpack readings. The <br />snowpack ranges from "average" in the Cache la Poudre River Basin <br />to "much above average" in the Gunnison, Upper Arkansas, Rio <br />Grande, San Juan, Dolores and Animas River Basins. <br /> <br />The following table presents the snowpack percentages for <br />Colorado's major drainage basins as of March 1, 1993. <br />