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GENERAL30618
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Last modified
8/24/2016 7:48:07 PM
Creation date
11/23/2007 6:45:44 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
DRMS Permit Index
Permit No
C1981033
IBM Index Class Name
General Documents
Doc Date
9/18/1985
Doc Name
PROPOSED DECISION AND FINDINGS OF COMPLIANCE FOR PR
From
Mines No. 1, No. 2 and No. 3
Permit Index Doc Type
FINDINGS
Media Type
D
Archive
No
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-32- <br />absolute decreed capacity of 1,620 acre-feet and a conditional decree of 522 <br />acre-feet. Both reservoirs store water for irrigation purposes and are filled <br />during spring runoff. They are usually drained by late August or early <br />September. <br />Water quality data has been collected at several sites throughout the <br />Minnesota Creek drainage. The data indicate that these waters are of a <br />calcium bicarbonate type with relatively low total dissolved solids <br />concentration. <br />There are over 100 springs located throughout the Mt. Gunnison life-of-mine <br />area. Measurements indicate that spring flows generally decrease from a high <br />in the early summer to a low in the fall. A number of the springs are <br />ephemeral, indicating that their sources are small localized aquifers (i.e. <br />landslide deposits, colluvium, lenticular sandstones, etc.). <br />Precipitation and Runoff <br />Only two precipitation stations exist for the watershed, one at Paonia and one <br />at the Mt. Gunnison mine. Since these are located near the North Fork of the <br />Gunnison River, they may not be representative of the total watershed. <br />Isohyetal lines can be used to show average precipitation that falls on the <br />watershed. Figure 5 represents mean annual precipitation and Figure 6 <br />illustrates May to September precipitation of the years 1931 to 1960. All <br />values were obtained from maps drawn by the U.S. Weather Bureau. Table 6 <br />summarizes precipitation data for both the north and south sections of the <br />watershed. Comparing these isohyetal maps with Figure 7 shows that <br />precipitation patterns are strongly influenced by topography. <br />During the period May through September, the amount of precipitation which <br />falls upon the watershed is less than the potential amount of water lost to <br />evapotranspiration (PET). In other words, transpiration by native vegetation <br />and evaporation consumes most of the precipitation and also will remove water <br />from the soil profile. For those areas where cash crops such as apples, <br />peaches, and the like are grown, irrigation water is removed from the North <br />Fork of the Gunnison River and applied on such lands. <br />Surface water in the general area is dominated by the North Fork of the <br />Gunnison River. Flow records exist for a U.S.G.S. Gaging Station near <br />Somerset. Data from this station (Table 2) show inflows to the area and <br />releases from Paonia Reservoir. Outflow from the basin is not as easily <br />determined. For example, the nearest station to Paonia is located on the <br />Gunnison River near Lazear, Colorado, 11 miles southwest of Paonia. Such a <br />station is too far from the study area to be acceptable for this analysis <br />since many inflows and outflows occur between Paonia and Lazear. However, a <br />review of past U.S. Geological Survey (U.S.G.S.) records indicates that for <br />the years 1922 through 1932, a gaging station existed on the North Fork of the <br />Gunnison River near Paonia. Also, for the years 1932 through 1950, a gaging <br />station existed in Somerset. These two stations are important since Paonia <br />Reservoir was not yet constructed and, thus, did not affect inflows to the <br />basin. <br />
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