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Hydrology and management of Lakes Mead and Mohave within the Colorado River Basin: Chapter 3 in <i>A synthesis of aquatic science for management of Lakes Mead and Mohave</i>

G. Chris Holdren,Todd Tietjen,Kent Turner,Jennell M. Miller-2012-01-01-U.S. Geological Survey circular/U.S. Geological Survey Circular
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TL;DRAbstract

The Colorado River Basin covers parts of seven States: Colorado, Wyoming, Utah, New Mexico, Nevada, Arizona, and California; at 1,450 mi (2,333.5 km) in length, the Colorado River is the seventh longest river in the United States (fig. 3-1). The Bureau of Reclamation has the responsibility for management of this system, in coordination with the seven basin States, within a complex framework of law, regulations, compact, treaty, and policies often referred to collectively as the “Law of the River.” Lake Mead is a critical component of the overall Colorado River management, providing the capacity to store almost 2 years of the average runoff of the river.

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The Colorado River Basin covers parts of seven States: Colorado, Wyoming, Utah, New Mexico, Nevada, Arizona, and California; at 1,450 mi (2,333.5 km) in length, the Colorado River is the seventh longest river in the United States (fig. 3-1). The Bureau of Reclamation has the responsibility for management of this system, in coordination with the seven basin States, within a complex framework of law, regulations, compact, treaty, and policies often referred to collectively as the “Law of the River.” Lake Mead is a critical component of the overall Colorado River management, providing the capacity to store almost 2 years of the average runoff of the river.

Keywords

Hydrology (agriculture)Drainage basinStructural basinSurface runoffLand reclamationEnvironmental scienceGeographyGeology

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