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Last modified
1/26/2010 12:30:14 PM
Creation date
10/11/2006 10:19:01 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Water Supply Protection
File Number
8135.300
Description
Ditch Companies - Catlin
State
CO
Basin
Arkansas
Water Division
2
Date
1/1/1973
Author
USGS
Title
Colorado Water Resources-circular Number 20 - Transit Losses and Travel Times for Reservoir Releases - Upper Arkansas River Basin - Colorado
Water Supply Pro - Doc Type
Report/Study
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<br />, <br /> <br />'. <br /> <br />Colorado has felt a particular need to strengthen its water poli- <br />cies. Interstate compacts have placed demanding requirements on the <br />water crossing Colorado's boundaries, The development of irrigation <br />and growth of metropolitan areas east of the Continental Divide have <br />further complicated Colorado's water problems. <br /> <br />In an attempt to solve some of these problems, many water projects <br />have been constructed in Colorado co provide storage for better distri- <br />bution of the annual water supply. Some projects also enhance the <br />supply within a watershed with the transbasin or transmountain diversion <br />of water, The Fryingpan-Arkansas Project will bring water from head- <br />water tributaries of the Fryingpan River in the Upper Colorado River <br />Basin into tributaries of the Arkansas River. This water will be stored <br />in nearby reservoirs, used for hydroelectric power generation, and then <br />transported more than 170 miles in the Arkansas River to fulfill irri- <br />gation and municipal needs downstream, The design and operation of such <br />water development plans greatly influence the economic and hydrologic <br />success of the project. <br /> <br />Purpose and Scope <br /> <br />In July of 1970, the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with <br />the Colorado Division of Water Resources, Office of the State Engineer, <br />and the Southeastern Colorado Water Conservancy District, began a study ~ <br />to determine transportation losses along the Arkansas River resulting <br />from deliveries of stored water to downstream water users, and to deter- <br />mine time of travel of reservoir releases from the reservoir to the <br />point of delivery. This report summarizes the results of that study. <br /> <br />The study concentrated on a 175-mile reach of the upper Arkansas <br />River valley from Twin Lakes Reservoir near Granite, Colo., to the <br />Colorado Canal headgate near Avondale, Colo. (fig. 1). The study con- <br />sisted of analyzing historical records of reservoir releases, Arkansas <br />River streamflow, and ditch diversions; of making detailed measurements <br />of streamflow and water-table changes before and during reservoir re- <br />leases; and of gathering weather and river-water temperature data. <br /> <br />Previous Investigations <br /> <br />Shortly after completion of the Twin Lakes Tunnel project in the <br />early 1930's, several studies were made by State Engineer M, C. Hinder- <br />lider (Colorado State Plan. Comm. and others, 1939) to determine trans- <br />portation losses of reservoir releases down the Arkansas River. As the <br />result of these studies, a policy was adopted charging releases a loss <br />of 0,07 percent per mile of river, For example, if the release is <br />100 ft3/s (cubic feet per second), the loss along the 175 miles of river <br />between Twin Lakes and the Colorado Canal headgate would be 12.2 ft3/s. <br /> <br />. <br /> <br />2 <br />
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