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FLOOD08368
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Last modified
1/25/2010 7:14:22 PM
Creation date
10/5/2006 3:33:14 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Floodplain Documents
County
El Paso
Community
El Paso County and Incorporated Areas
Basin
Arkansas
Title
FIS - El Paso County and Incorporated Areas - Volume 1
Date
8/23/1999
Prepared For
El Paso County
Prepared By
FEMA
Floodplain - Doc Type
Current FEMA Regulatory Floodplain Information
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<br />flood on Monument Creek, 50,000 cfs (Reference 10), In Colorado Springs, Monument <br />Creek attained its peak flow within 2.5 hours and was back within the banks 3 hours later. <br />The flow rate of this flood exceeded the estimated 500.year peak flow rate of the area, <br /> <br />Below the confluence of Jimmy Camp Creek with Fountain Creek, the June 1965 flood <br />probably exceeded all known floods in EI Paso County, This flood was caused primarily by <br />Jimmy Camp Creek, At a point 4,5 miles above the confluence with Fountain Creek, the <br />estimated peak discharge was 124,000 cfs (Reference 9), which is estimated to be a <br />recurrence interval far exceeding 500 years, <br /> <br />. <br /> <br />The following summaries of floods were taken primarily from a USGS publication (Reference <br />II) and from USACE files, <br /> <br />June 10 1864, The Colorado Sprinlls Gazette of June 27. 1864, in a series of <br />articles on early happenings. refers to the flood of 1864 as follows: <br /> <br />There had been several thundershowers and the creeks were <br />somewhat swollen, though not so much as to cause any <br />apprehension, But by 4 o'clock ,.. a heavy cloud came up over <br />Cheyenne Mountain and the sky gathered darkness until nearly <br />sundown, when rain and hail began to fall in tremendous torrents", <br />The rain came down, not in drops but in floods. the hail consisted <br />of huge lumps of ice, some of them over 3 inches in diameter; the <br />whole surface of the country was flooded as though it were a vast <br />lake, and in some of the ravines the water rushed along in torrents <br />20 or 30 feet deep, The storm continued in full violence until about <br />9 o'clock, The area of the storm was confined within a radius of 3 <br />or 4 miles, <br /> <br />May 20 1878, Although the few available precipitation records for 1878 indicate <br />no general storm, a cloudburst near Palmer Lake caused a flood that was reported <br />by the Rocky Mountain News of May 20. 1878, as follows: <br /> <br />Monument and Fountain Creeks swept out bridges, EI Paso County <br />Losses very heavy. caused by cloudburst in valley near Divide, <br />followed by hail. <br /> <br />July 26 1885, This is the earliest flood of record in the Templeton Gap Basin. and <br />apparently the most severe, The Colorado Sprinlls Gazette, July 26, 1885, gives the <br />following account: <br /> <br />H, T, Cook, who resides 5 miles northeast of Templeton Gap says <br />that for an hour during the evening (July 25) there was an incessant <br />fall of rain to the extent that a tub near the house filled with water <br />in the space of an hour, This indicates a rainfall of about 16 inches, <br /> <br />Immediately the mighty torrent came tearing down the gulch which <br />runs through the ranch below the house and, not withstanding the <br />house is located 15 feet above the gulch. the water completely <br />surrounded it for a long distance at a depth of several feet. The <br /> <br />II <br />
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