Difference between revisions of "Pre-Dam Comparisons-Working Page"
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== Under construction- Data Collection page == | == Under construction- Data Collection page == | ||
''[Source: AZ Wildlife Views- Sep-Oct 2012 -Bill Stewart]'' | ''[Source: AZ Wildlife Views- Sep-Oct 2012 -Bill Stewart]'' | ||
− | *In any | + | *In any given year, flows ranged from less than 1,000 cfs to more than 100,000 cfs" |
**Today, flows rarely get above 31,500 cfs (maximum power-plant capacity) and rarely below 5,000 cfs | **Today, flows rarely get above 31,500 cfs (maximum power-plant capacity) and rarely below 5,000 cfs | ||
**Flows are more stablized | **Flows are more stablized |
Revision as of 15:37, 16 May 2014
Under construction- Data Collection page
[Source: AZ Wildlife Views- Sep-Oct 2012 -Bill Stewart]
- In any given year, flows ranged from less than 1,000 cfs to more than 100,000 cfs"
- Today, flows rarely get above 31,500 cfs (maximum power-plant capacity) and rarely below 5,000 cfs
- Flows are more stablized
- Water temperatures went from near freezing in winter to above 85 degrees in summer.
- Today, steady temperatures between 45 degrees and 50 degrees. (mainly because water is drawn from near the bottom of the lake)
- The river went from being heavy laden with turbid, brown sediment to flowing with very clear water.
- Sediment a fraction of what it once was
- Drift in the system changed.
- What was riparian vegetation like pre-dam??
Positive Impacts from Dam
- The cool, clear water has created one of the best tailwater rainbow trout fisheries in the nation at Lees Ferry.