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Conejos River Map
The Rio Grande basin within Colorado is located in
south-central Colorado and encompasses approximately 7,500 square
miles (U.S. Department of Agriculture 1978). The primary feature
of the basin is an open, almost treeless, relatively flat valley
floor (known as the San Luis Valley) surrounded by mountains. The
valley floor ranges in elevation from 7,440 feet on the south end
to 8,000 feet on the north end, and is bounded on the west by the
San Juan Mountains and on the east by the Sangre de Cristo Mountains.

Of the 7,500 square miles, there is an area of approximately 3,000
square miles in the northern part of the valley that does not naturally
drain into the Rio Grande because it is separated by a low divide
in the shallow ground water table formed by the alluvial fan of
the Rio Grande on the west and alluvial material from the Sangre
de Cristo Mountains on the east. This non-tributary area is known
as the Closed Basin.
The Rio Grande main stem rises in the San Juan Mountains in the
vicinity of Creede, Colorado and flows easterly where it is joined
by the South Fork of the Rio Grande at South Fork, Colorado. The
main stem continues east to Del Norte where it flows out onto the
San Luis Valley floor in a southeasterly direction. The main stem
continues this path until it reaches Alamosa, where it abruptly
turns south and flows to the New Mexico state line.
The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation (USBR) prepared a report in 1947
recommending the construction of Platoro Reservoir in the Conejos
River basin. This reservoir was built from 1949 to 1951 with a
capacity of approximately 60,000 acre-feet that includes a 6,000
acre-foot flood pool. Platoro Reservoir is decreed for 53,571 acre-feet.
Because this reservoir was built after the compact was signed,
it is referred to as a post-compact reservoir and is subject to
special restrictions under the compact. The U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers assumes operation of Platoro Reservoir during flood control
situations.
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