Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
Upholding rural Americans' rights to grow food,
own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
Weekly water report
Herald and News June
16, 2011
The elevation of Upper
Klamath Lake was 4,142.56 feet on Wednesday.
At the end of May lake
levels exceeded those mandated by a biological opinion, and
are on track to exceed June’s mandated level of 4,140.5
feet.
The A Canal was flowing
at a rate of 741 cubic feet per second (cfs) on Tuesday. On
Wednesday the Williamson River was flowing at a rate of
1,600 cfs, which is 116 percent of the long-term average for
the date.
Clear Lake’s elevation
was 4,529.13 feet last Thursday, the most recent data
available, with 188,170 acre-feet of storage. Gerber
Reservoir’s elevation was 4,829.82 feet last Thursday, also
the most recent data available, with 73,780 acre feet of
storage.
The National Weather
Service is reporting that since Sept. 30, the end of the
2010 water year, Klamath Falls has received 10.24 inches of
precipitation, which is 96 percent of the historical
average.
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Page Updated: Friday June 17, 2011 03:36 AM Pacific
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