
Colorado
River near Lees Ferry, Arizona, looking downstream. Photo
courtesy of US Geological Survey.
Introduction
The Colorado
River flows 1,450 miles (2,330 km) from the high peaks of the
Rocky Mountains through the desert Southwest, along the way serving
as a vital source of water for municipalities, agriculture, hydropower,
recreation, and fish and wildlife species. The Colorado is highly
variable, with a fivefold difference in annual flow between the
wettest and driest years. The Colorado is also heavily regulated
and strictly apportioned, and in most years in the past few decades
no water has reached its mouth at the Gulf of California after
being doled out so thoroughly.
In recent
years, human demands for water supply have approached the capacity
of the Colorado River to provide for them. This has made it even
more critical for water managers to fully understand and plan
for the inevitable swings from periods of wet conditions to dry
conditions and back again. The main source of this understanding
has been the gaged records of streamflow, which are about 100
years long at most. But the recent drought, with unprecedented
low flows at many gages in the Colorado River basin, has called
into question whether the gaged record is an adequate baseline
for water planning.
In this website,
Colorado River Streamflow: A Paleo Perspective, we will assess
the gaged record of Colorado River streamflow in the context of
multi-century flow reconstructions from tree rings. We will describe
the Colorado River system and its management, then the century-long
gaged record of flow, and then the use of tree rings to extend,
or reconstruct, the gaged record 400 years or more into the past,
providing a more complete picture of past flow variability. We
will take a closer look at the most recent streamflow reconstructions
for Lees Ferry, and how they compare with previous reconstructions.
On
to...The Colorado River