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TreeFlow
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Colorado River Streamflow Home
The Colorado River
The Compact and Lees Ferry
The Lees Ferry gage record
The paleo record
Tree rings and streamflow
Pioneering
work
The first reconstruction
Subsequent efforts
The latest reconstructions
Comparison of reconstructions
Other paleo proxies
A final word
References
Credits
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The
Lees Ferry gaged flow record
As the point where the river is allocated between
the upper and lower basins, Lees Ferry is the "fulcrum"
for managing the Colorado River, so it is essential to determine
how much water flows past that point. The stream gage at Lees
Ferry was installed in 1921, during the Compact negotiations,
and has operated continuously since then. For years prior to 1921,
gage records upstream and downstream of Lees Ferry were used to
estimate the flow at Lees Ferry.
Like
most rivers, the natural flow regime of the Colorado River has
been altered by human activities. As
a result, the gaged streamflow record does not accurately represent
the natural long-term trends and year-to-year variability in overall
water supply in the basin. The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation
has made corrections to the gaged record to account for water
depletions (usage) in the upper basin, diversions into and out
of the upper basin, and evaporative losses from upper basin reservoirs.
The resulting streamflow record is called the "natural flow"
record, since it represents what the flow at Lees Ferry would
be if the human alterations to the river did not exist. This natural
flow record is important because it shows the variability in streamflow
due to climate alone, apart from changes in the use and management
of the river.

The graph
above shows the natural flow record for the Colorado River at
Lees Ferry, from 1906-2004. The annual flows are shown in blue,
a running 10-year average in red, and a cumulative average in
green. Keeping in mind that the total allocation of water at Lees
Ferry is 16.5 million acre-feet (MAF) per year, and actual depletions
(use plus evaporation) are now about 14 MAF annually, several
features of the natural flow record are worth noting:
- The annual
flows over the past century have varied by a factor of five,
from about 5 MAF (1977) to 25 MAF (1984)
- The period
from 1906-1930 had 10-year average flows higher than any other
part of the record except the mid-1980s
- The cumulative
average annual flow declined from about 17 MAF (averaged from
1906-1930) to about 15 MAF (averaged from 1906-2004)
- The 10-year
running average has varied from about 12.4 MAF to 18 MAF--in
other words, the decadal-scale variability has been high
- From 1934
to 1984, the 10-year running average was almost always below
15 MAF
- The 2000-2004
drought was the most severe multi-year drought in the record,
with an average annual flow of 9.6 MAF over those five years
As the 20th
century progressed, the observed range of natural variability
of Colorado River flows grew ever broader, as "unprecedented"
high and low flows were experienced. From this broader frame of
reference, it is now apparent that the early period of the record--unfortunately
used as the basis for allocating the river's flow--was an unusually
wet period.
Does the now
100-year-long natural flow record capture the full range of natural
variability of Colorado River streamflow? This seems unlikely,
given that in just the past 30 years, the river has seen the two
lowest annual flows (1977, 2002) and the two highest annual flows
(1983, 1984) on record.
On
to...The Paleo Record
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