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Fryingpan–Arkansas Project
The Fryingpan–Arkansas Project, or "Fry-Ark," is a water diversion, storage and delivery project serving southeastern Colorado. The multi-purpose project was authorized in 1962 by President Kennedy to serve municipal, industrial, and hydroelectric power generation, and to enhance recreation, fish and wildlife interests. Construction began in 1964 and was completed in 1981. The project includes five dams and reservoirs, one federal hydroelectric power plant (two private, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, FERC regulated plants), and 22 tunnels and conduits totaling in length. The Bureau of Reclamation, under the Department of the Interior built and manages the project.U.S. Department of the Interior: ''Water and Power Resources Service, Project Data'', page 485–506. United States Government Printing Office, 1981. Like its sister–project, the Colorado–Big Thompson Project, the Fry-Ark brings available water from Colorado's Colorado Western Slope, West Slope to the more a ...
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Turquoise Reservoir
Turquoise is an opacity (optics), opaque, blue-green, blue-to-green mineral that is a hydrate, hydrous phosphate of copper and aluminium, with the chemical formula . It is rare and valuable in finer grades and has been prized as a gemstone for millennia due to its hue. The robin egg blue or sky blue color of the Iran, Persian turquoise mined near the modern city of Nishapur, Iran, has been used as a guiding reference for evaluating turquoise quality. Like most other opaque gems, turquoise has been devalued by the introduction of treatments, imitations, and synthetics into the market. Names The word ''turquoise'' dates to the 17th century and is derived from the Old French ''turquois'' meaning "Turkish" because the mineral was first brought to Europe through the Ottoman Empire.Turquoise
. minerals.usgs.gov
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Forebay (reservoir)
A forebay is an artificial basin or pool of water situated upstream of a larger water body such as a reservoir, lake, or hydroelectric facility. It serves a variety of functions, including flow regulation, sediment capture, hydraulic buffering, and ecological enhancement. Functions Flood control and flow regulation Forebays act as holding basins during periods of intense rainfall or snowmelt. They slow the movement of water to prevent sudden surges into downstream reservoirs or urban drainage systems, thereby mitigating flood risk and protecting infrastructure. Sediment and debris management Forebays reduce water velocity, allowing sediment and debris to settle out before water enters a reservoir or treatment plant. This reduces the need for dredging and prolongs the life and effectiveness of downstream systems. Hydroelectric power supply In hydroelectric installations, a forebay serves as a regulating reservoir, maintaining a stable flow of water to turbines. This ensu ...
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United States Bureau Of Reclamation
The Bureau of Reclamation, formerly the United States Reclamation Service, is a federal agency under the U.S. Department of the Interior, which oversees water resource management, specifically as it applies to the oversight and operation of the diversion, delivery, and storage projects that it has built throughout the western United States for irrigation, water supply, and attendant hydroelectric power generation. It is currently the U.S.'s largest wholesaler of water, bringing water to more than 31 million people, and providing one in five Western farmers with irrigation water for 10 million acres of farmland, which produce 60% of the nation's vegetables and 25% of its fruits and nuts. The Bureau is also the second largest producer of hydroelectric power in the western U.S. On June 17, 1902, in accordance with the Reclamation Act, Secretary of the Interior Ethan Allen Hitchcock established the U.S. Reclamation Service within the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS). The n ...
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Buildings And Structures In Colorado
A building or edifice is an enclosed structure with a roof, walls and windows, usually standing permanently in one place, such as a house or factory. Buildings come in a variety of sizes, shapes, and functions, and have been adapted throughout history for numerous factors, from building materials available, to weather conditions, land prices, ground conditions, specific uses, prestige, and aesthetic reasons. To better understand the concept, see ''Nonbuilding structure'' for contrast. Buildings serve several societal needs – occupancy, primarily as shelter from weather, security, living space, privacy, to store belongings, and to comfortably live and work. A building as a shelter represents a physical separation of the human habitat (a place of comfort and safety) from the ''outside'' (a place that may be harsh and harmful at times). buildings have been objects or canvasses of much artistic expression. In recent years, interest in sustainable planning and building practi ...
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Energy Infrastructure In Colorado
Energy () is the quantitative property that is transferred to a body or to a physical system, recognizable in the performance of work and in the form of heat and light. Energy is a conserved quantity—the law of conservation of energy states that energy can be converted in form, but not created or destroyed. The unit of measurement for energy in the International System of Units (SI) is the joule (J). Forms of energy include the kinetic energy of a moving object, the potential energy stored by an object (for instance due to its position in a field), the elastic energy stored in a solid object, chemical energy associated with chemical reactions, the radiant energy carried by electromagnetic radiation, the internal energy contained within a thermodynamic system, and rest energy associated with an object's rest mass. These are not mutually exclusive. All living organisms constantly take in and release energy. The Earth's climate and ecosystems processes are driven primarily ...
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Lake Pueblo State Park
Lake Pueblo State Park is a state park located in Pueblo County, Colorado. It includes of shoreline and of land. Activities it offers include two full-service marinas, recreational fishing, hiking, camping and swimming at a special swim beach. Lake Pueblo Lake Pueblo (also known as Pueblo Reservoir) has a maximum depth of and is impounded by Pueblo Dam. Its surface elevation is . Lake Pueblo is host to many water recreation activities including sailing, motor-boating, waterskiing, wakeboarding, wakesurfing, river tubing and prime fishing. History Pueblo Dam was constructed from 1970–1975 across the Arkansas River in Pueblo County as part of the Bureau of Reclamation's Fryingpan-Arkansas Project. While the primary purpose of the reservoir is to provide supplemental water for agricultural, municipal, and industrial uses, water from Pueblo also helps enhance recreation, fish and wildlife. Additionally, and unlike most reservoirs Reclamation constructed in Colorado, the Pue ...
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Arkansas River
The Arkansas River is a major tributary of the Mississippi River. It generally flows to the east and southeast as it traverses the U.S. states of Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma, and Arkansas. The river's source basin lies in Colorado, specifically the Arkansas River Valley. The headwaters derive from the snowpack in the Sawatch Range, Sawatch and Mosquito Range, Mosquito mountain ranges. It flows east into Kansas and finally through Oklahoma and Arkansas, where it meets the Mississippi River. At , it is the sixth-longest river in the United States, the second-longest tributary in the Mississippi–Missouri River, Missouri system, and the List of river systems by length, 47th longest river in the world. Its origin is in the Rocky Mountains in Lake County, Colorado, near Leadville, Colorado, Leadville. In 1859, Placer mining, placer gold discovered in the Leadville area brought thousands seeking to strike it rich, but the easily recovered placer gold was quickly exhausted. The Arkansa ...
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Independence Pass (Colorado)
Independence Pass, originally known as Hunter Pass, is a high mountain pass in central Colorado, United States. It is at elevation on the Continental Divide in the Sawatch Range of the Rocky Mountains. The pass is midway between Aspen and Twin Lakes, on the border between Pitkin and Lake counties. State Highway 82 traverses it, and after Cottonwood Pass to the south, is the second highest elevation of a paved Colorado state highway on a through road. State Highway 5, the highest paved road in North America, is a dead-end route reaching , just below the summit of Mount Blue Sky. The recently paved Pikes Peak Highway is another dead-end road and is only slightly lower, with an elevation of on the summit of the mountain. Trail Ridge Road in Rocky Mountain National Park, part of U.S. Highway 34, reaches a maximum elevation of . It is also the second-highest pass with an improved road in the state, the fourth-highest paved road in the state and the second highest paved crossing ...
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Lake Creek (Colorado)
Lake Creek may refer to: Communities * Lake Creek Township, Calhoun County, Iowa, one of seventeen townships * Lake Creek, Oregon, an unincorporated community located near Eagle Point * Lake Creek, Texas, an unincorporated community located near Cooper * Lake Creek, an area in which the unincorporated community of Dutzow, Missouri Dutzow is an unincorporated community in southeastern Warren County, Missouri, United States. It is located on Route 94, approximately three miles north of Washington. Located near the Missouri River, it is one of the oldest German communities i ... is located Streams * Lake Creek (Moose Creek), a tributary of Moose Creek in Alaska * Lake Creek (Charrette Creek), in Missouri * Lake Creek (Flat Creek), in Missouri * Lake Creek (New York), a tributary of Catskill Creek in New York * Lake Creek (Siuslaw River), in Oregon Schools * Lake Creek High School in Montgomery, Texas See also

* {{geodis ...
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Twin Lakes Dam
Twin Lakes Dam (National ID # CO02045) is a dam in Lake County, Colorado, about south of Leadville. The earthen dam was constructed in 1978 by the United States Bureau of Reclamation with a height of and a length at its crest of . The dam is owned and operated by the Bureau as one element of its larger "transbasin" Fryingpan-Arkansas Project, which transfers available water from Colorado's West Slope across the Continental Divide A continental divide is a drainage divide on a continent such that the drainage basin on one side of the divide feeds into one ocean or sea, and the basin on the other side either feeds into a different ocean or sea, or else is endorheic, not ... to the more arid, and more populated, East Slope. The reservoir it creates, Twin Lakes, is an enlargement of a natural glacial lake. It has a surface area of and a maximum capacity of . Recreation includes boating, fishing for trout, and camping at five Forest Service campgrounds in the area (Dext ...
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Western Area Power Administration
As one of the four power marketing administrations within the U.S. Department of Energy, the Western Area Power Administration (WAPA)'s role is to market wholesale hydropower generated at 57 hydroelectric federal dams operated by the Bureau of Reclamation, United States Army Corps of Engineers and the International Boundary and Water Commission. WAPA delivers this power through a more than 17,000-circuit-mile, high-voltage power transmission system to more than 700 preference power customers across the West. Those customers, in turn, provide retail electric service to more than 40 million consumers. WAPA is headquartered in the Denver, Colorado suburb of Lakewood, Colorado. WAPA’s service territory spans 15 central and western states, including Arizona, California, Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, and Wyoming. History WAPA was created in Section 302 of the Department of Energy Organization Act ...
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