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Last modified
1/26/2010 12:49:52 PM
Creation date
10/11/2006 11:40:05 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Water Supply Protection
File Number
8200.766
Description
Gunnison River General
State
CO
Basin
Gunnison
Water Division
4
Date
11/1/1962
Author
USDA
Title
Water and Related Land Resources - Gunnison River Basin - Colorado
Water Supply Pro - Doc Type
Report/Study
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<br />~Cl~397 <br /> <br />GENERAL DESCRIPTION OF THE BASIN <br /> <br />Location and Size <br /> <br />.' <br /> <br />The Gunnison River Basin is located in West-Central Colorado. Its boundary <br />encompasses an area of 8,020 square miles and includes all or major portions <br />of Gunnison, Montrose, Delta and Ouray Counties and portions of Mesa, <br />Hinsdale, Saguache and San Juan Counties. TI1e Continental Divide forms <br />the east and southeast boundary of the Basin and the San Juan Mountains <br />and Uncompahgre Plateau form the south and southwest boundary. The Basin <br />is bounded on the north by the Elk Mountains and the Grand Mesa and on <br />the northwest by the Grand Valley. It is approximately 145 miles long <br />east and west and 95 miles wide at its widest point north and south. The <br />Gunnison River and its tributaries drain about 8 percent of the area of <br />the State of Colorado. <br /> <br />.' . <br /> <br />Climate <br /> <br />Climate in the Gunnison River Basin varies considerably but generally could <br />be considered as semiarid. Variation is due largely to the wide range in <br />elevations. The elevation of Uncompahgre Peak on the southern edge of the <br />Basin is 14,301 feet above sea level, while at Grand Junction, where the <br />Gunnison River enters the Colorado River, the elevation is 4,550 feet. <br /> <br />Average annual precipitation varies from more than 40 inches in the upper <br />reaches of the Basin to less than 10 inches in the lower valleys. Measured <br />average annual snowfall varies from more than 460 inches at Ruby and 400 <br />inches at Savage Basin, to approximately 170 inches at Crested Butte in <br />Gunnison County and 20 inches at Grand Junction. Upper basin lands have <br />an annual frost-free period of less than 70 days, while lower basin valleys <br />near Grand Junction average around 190 days. <br /> <br />History of Settlement <br /> <br />The first explorations in the Basin were made by the Spanish. Many of the <br />names of streams and mountains still bear the names given them by Captain <br />Juan Marie de Rivera in 1765 and Father Escalante in 1776. In 1853 Captain <br />Gunnison was commissioned by the Government to search for a feasible rail- <br />road route across the Continental Divide. His party did much of the early <br />exploration in the Basin. <br /> <br />The Ute Indians retained possession of the Gunnison River Basin until 1873 <br />when they ceded to the Federal Government a large tract of upper basin <br />land, which was immediately opened for settlement. The lower basin was <br />not settled until the compromise of 1881 between the U. S. Government and <br />the Ute Indians. As a result of the compromise, the Indians agreed to <br />leave the area and locate in the Uintah Reservation in the territory of <br />Utah. <br /> <br />- 3 - <br />
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