Water Sources and Uses in Wyoming

1123 Words3 Pages

Water Sources and Uses in Wyoming

With today’s drought situations, it is more important than ever to be aware of the water sources in Wyoming as well as the various uses of the water and the amount of usable water that is available compared to the amount that must be used. This paper will not only inform about those uses and numbers, but also the highly debated HB 19 bill and the four major river basins in the western part of the country that supply Wyoming with it’s water. We will be talking about where and how Wyoming gets most of its surface water every year. Along with surface water, groundwater is also an important supply of water to the area which we count on for the environment, and it is important to try to conserve as much of this moisture as we can.

The main water supply for Wyoming consists of four major river basins the Missouri-Mississippi, the Green-Colorado, the Snake-Columbia, and the Great Salt Lake. Wyoming is supplied with all of these supplies because of its placement on the Continental Divide. The Missouri-Mississippi results in 72 percent of Wyoming drain because of the Yellowstone, Wind, Bighorn, and Shoshone Rivers in the Northwestern part of the state. The Northeastern area is covered by the Tongue, Powder, Belle Fourche, Cheyenne, and Niobrara Rivers. While the Great Salt Lake provides only 2 percent of the water in Wyoming, the Green and Snake Rivers off of the Columbia River provides 17 percent of the supply.

<

Reservoir storage is crucial in maintaining available water for use throughout the summer by storing the snowmelt each year, which accounts for 70 percent of Wyoming’s entire water supply and allows for 1.9 million acre-feet of new water flowing into the state each year. All of thes...

... middle of paper ...

...ater, and continuing water overuse.

Works Cited:

J. F. Ortega , J. A. de Juan and J. M. Tarjuelo (2004). Evaluation of the water cost effect on water resource management. Agricultural Water Management, Vol. 66 Issue 2, pages 125-144.

Vickers, A. (2002). Conserving our finite water supplies in an era of chronic drought: Practical steps. Electronic Green Journal Issue 17.

Unknown Author (2003). A growing thirst. Economist, Vol. 336 Issue 8308, page 34.

Corral-Verdugo, V. et.al. . (2002). Residential water consumption, motivation for conserving water and continuing the tradgedy of the commons. Environmental Management, Vol. 30 Number 4.

McDonald, M., & Brown, K. (2000). Soil and water conservation projects and rural livelihoods: options for design and research to enhance adoption adaptation. Land Degradation and Development, Vol. 11 Number 4

Open Document