Water Definitions
absolute water
right
A
property right to put water to beneficial use with a specified priority date.
acre-foot
A
volume of water equal to one foot in depth covering an area of one acre.
Also 43,560 cubic feet, or 325,851 gallons. Used to measure stored water
quantities.
adjudication
To
hear and settle a case by judicial procedure.
algae
Chlorophyll-bearing nonvascular, primarily
aquatic species that have no true roots, stems, or leaves; most algae are
microscopic, but some species can be as large as vascular plants.
alkali
A soluble salt or a mixture of soluble salts
present in some soils of arid regions in quantity detrimental to agriculture.
alkalinity
Generally, refers to the sum of the concentration of bicarbonate and carbonate
of an aqueous solution.
alluvial aquifer
A water-bearing deposit of unconsolidated material (sand and gravel) left
behind by a river or other flowing water.
alluvium
Deposits of clay, slit, sand, gravel or other particulate rock material left by
a river in a streambed, on a flood plain, delta, or at the base of a mountain.
amalgamation
The dissolving or blending of a metal (commonly gold and silver) in mercury to
separate it from its parent material.
ambient
Natural concentration of water quality
constituents prior to mixing of either point or nonpoint source load of
contaminants or completely enveloping. From a time series of measurements of a
parameter at a given location the ambient value is the 85th percentile.
ammonia
A compound of nitrogen and hydrogen
(NH3) that is a common by-product of animal waste. Ammonia readily
converts to nitrate in soils and streams.
anomalies
As related to fish, externally visible
skin or subcutaneous disorders, including deformities, eroded fins, lesions and
tumors.
appropriate
(verb)
To take the legal actions necessary to create a right to take water from a
stream, tributary or aquifer for application to beneficial use.
appropriation
The
right to take water from a stream, tributary or aquifer for beneficial use at a
specified rate of flow, either for immediate use or to store for later
use. Usually evidenced by a water court decree.
aquifer
An
underground deposit of sand, gravel or rock through which water can pass or is
stored. Aquifers supply the water for wells and springs.
artificial recharge
Augmentation of natural replenishment of ground-water storage by some
method of construction, spreading of water, or by pumping water directly into an
aquifer.
atmospheric deposition
The transfer of substances from the air to the surface of the Earth,
either in wet form (rain, fog, snow, dew, frost, hail) or in dry form (gases,
aerosols, particles).
augmentation plan
A
court-approved plan that allows a water user to divert water out of priority so
long as adequate replacement is made to the affected stream system preventing
injury to the water rights of senior users.
augmentation source
The
supply of water used to replace out-of-priority depletions.
bank
The sloping ground that borders a stream and
confines the water in the natural channel when the water level, or flow, is
normal.
beneficial use
Application
of water without waste for human or natural benefit.
call
The
exercise of a senior water right holder of "calling" for his or her
water rights, requiring upstream junior water right holders to allow water to
flow to the senior right holder.
Clean Water Act
The
federal law that sets forth how the United States will restore and maintain the
chemical, physical and biological integrity of the country's waters (oceans,
lakes, streams and rivers, ground water and wetlands). The law provides
protection to the country's surface waters from both point and non-point sources
of pollution.
Colorado Doctrine
see
appropriation.
Colorado Water Conservation
Board
The state agency vested with the authority to
appropriate water of streams and lakes in amounts that are determined to be
necessary to preserve the natural environment to a reasonable degree.
compact
A
contract between states that is ratified by those states' legislatures and by
the U.S. Congress. The contract controls the division of water in a river
system that flows across state boundaries.
conditional water right
The legal preservation of a priority date that provides a
water user time to develop his or her water right, but reserves a more senior
date. A conditional right becomes an absolute right when water is actually
put to beneficial use.
conservancy district
Established
by decree of a court under the Water Conservancy District Act of 1937. A
conservancy district can obtain rights-of-way for works; contract with the
United States or otherwise provide for construction of facilities; assume
contractual or bonded indebtedness; administer, operate, and maintain
physical works; have authority to conserve, control, allocate, and distribute
water supplies; and have contracting and limited taxing authority to derive the
revenues necessary to accomplish its purposes. There are currently 45
conservancy districts in Colorado.
conservation district
Established
under specific statues by the Colorado General Assembly. There are
currently three conservation districts in Colorado; the Colorado River
Water Conservation District, the Southwestern Water Conservation District, and
the Rio Grande Water Conservation District. The mission is to oversee the
conservation, use, and development of water in large geographical areas of the
state.
consumptive use
Any
use of water that permanently removes water from the natural stream system.
Continental Divide
An
imaginary boundary line that runs north-south along the crest of the Rocky
Mountains, separating river and drainages that flow west to the Pacific Ocean
from those that flow south and east to the Gulf of Mexico.
cubic feet per second (cfs)
A rate of water flow at a given point, amounting to a
volume of one cubic foot for each second of time. Equal to 7.48 gallons
per second, 448.8 gallons per minute, or 1.984 acre feet per day.
decree "water"
A
court decision about a water right that is then administered by Colorado's Water
Resources Department.
direct flow (also direct
right)
Water diverted from a river or stream for
use without interruption between diversion and use except for incidental
purposes, such as settling or filtration.
diversion
The
removal of water from its natural course or location, or controlling water in
its natural course or location by means of a ditch, canal, flume, reservoir,
bypass, pipeline, conduit, well, pump or other device.
drought
A
long period of below-average precipitation.
due diligence
The
efforts necessary to complete a water appropriation action that demonstrates a
good faith action to complete a diversion of water within a reasonable time
period.
effluent
Water
discharged after use, as in water leaving a wastewater treatment plant.
effluent exchange
The
practice of using wastewater effluent from transbasin water, non-tributary water
sources, or other sources without causing injury to other water rights as a
replacement source of water for diversion of water farther upstream that would
otherwise have been out of priority.
Endangered Species Act
The
federal law that governs how animal and plant species whose populations are
dangerously in decline or close to extinction will be protected and
recovered. The law protects not only threatened and endangered species,
but also the ecosystems upon which they depend.
Energy Policy Act
(EPACT)
A 1992 federal law that states, among other
things, that no toilet for household use manufactured after Jan. 1, 1994, shall
use more than 1.6 gallons per flush and that shower heads and faucets
manufactured after Jan. 1, 1994, may not use more than 2.5 gallons per minute.
exchange
A
process by which water, under certain conditions, may be diverted out of
priority at one point by replacing it with a like amount of water at another
point.
exempt wells
Those wells that are exempt from water rights administration under a priority system (examples of exempt wells are household use only, domestic and livestock wells, and pre 1972 unregistered wells ).
firm annual yield
The
yearly amount of water that can be dependably supplied from the raw water
sources of a given water supply system.
futile call
A
situation in which a junior ( more recent) priority is allowed to continue to
divert in spite of a downstream senior call because curtailing the junior would
not reasonably produce any additional water for the senior.
ground water
Water
found below the earth's surface.
hydrologic cycle
The
movement of water from the atmosphere to the earth and back again to the
atmosphere. The three stages are precipitation, runoff or infiltration and
evaporation.
instream flows
Water
flowing in its natural stream bed, such as water required for maintaining
flowing streams, or for fish.
junior rights
Water
rights that are more recent than older or more senior rights.
National Pollution Discharge
Elimination System (NPDES) Permit
A permit required
under Section 401 of the Clean Water Act regulating discharge of pollutants to
the nation's waterways.
National Environmental Policy
Act (NEPA)
The federal law enacted to ensure the
integration of natural and social sciences and environmental design in planning
and decision-making for projects that may impact the quality of the human
environment.
non-consumptive use
Water
drawn for use that is not consumed, for example, water withdrawn for purposes
such as hydropower generation. It also includes uses such as boating or
fishing where the water is still available for other uses at the same site.
non-exempt wells
Those that are governed by the priority system and may be curtailed (included any other type of well not considered exempt).
non-point source
Pollution
discharged over a wide land area, not from one specific location. Runoff
from city streets, parking lots, home lawns, agricultural land, individual
septic systems and construction sites that finds its way into lakes and stream
constitutes an important sources of water pollutants.
non-tributary ground
water
Underground water that meets certain
legislative criteria as to its effect on a stream system.
point source
Pollutants
discharged from any identifiable point, including pipes, ditches, channels,
sewers, tunnels and containers of various types.
potable
Water
that is considered safe for domestic consumption; drinkable.
prior appropriation
doctrine
A legal concept in which the first person
to appropriate water and apply it to a beneficial use has the first right to use
that amount of water from that source. Each successive appropriator may
only take a share of the water remaining after all senior water rights are
satisfied. This is the historical basis for Colorado water law and is
sometimes known as the Colorado Doctrine or the principle of "first in
time, first in right."
priority: The
right of an earlier appropriator to divert from a natural stream in preference
to a later appropriator.
priority date: The
date of establishment of a water right. The rights established by
application have the application date as the date of priority.
raw water: Untreated
water.
reservoir: An
impoundment of collected water controlled by a dam (raw water) or storage tank
(potable water).
return flows: The
unused portion of water that returns to a stream or river after a beneficial
use.
reuse: To
use again, to intercept for subsequent beneficial use--either directly or by
exchange--water that would otherwise return to the stream system.
revegetate: To
provide barren land with a new vegetative cover.
runoff: Water
that flows on the earth's surface to streams, rivers, lakes, and oceans.
Safe Drinking Water Act
(SDWA): Federal legislation that regulates the treatment of water
for human consumption. Requires testing for and elimination of
contaminants to levels for the protection of human health.
senior rights: Water
rights that are staked the earliest with the water court.
surface water: Water
present on the earth's surface.
system loss: An
amount of water, expressed as a percentage, lost from a water storage or
distribution system due to leaks, evaporation, seepage and unauthorized use.
transbasin diversion: The
conveyance of water from its natural drainage basin into another basin for
beneficial use.
transmountain diversion: The conveyance of water from one drainage basin to another
across the Continental Divide.
treated water: Water
that has been filtered and/or disinfected; sometimes used interchangeably with
"potable" water.
tributary: A
stream or river that flows into a larger one.
tributary drainage: The
area from which water naturally drains by gravity into a water course.
tributary ground water: Water
present below the earth's surface that is hydrologically connected to a natural
surface stream.
urban runoff: Excess
water that doesn't infiltrate the soil, but flows to a storm sewer or open
waterway.
water and sanitation
districts: A special taxing district formed by the
residents of the district for the combined purpose of providing potable water
and sanitary wastewater services.
water right: A
property right to make beneficial use of a particular amount of water with a
specified priority date.
watershed: An
area from which water drains to a given stream or river or river system.
Wellhead Protection
Program: An amendment to the federal Safe Drinking
Water Act in 1986. Initiated to minimize the potential for contamination
of public ground water supplies.
wetlands: Areas
with standing water of a high water table either permanently or for some
significant period each year. Generally includes swamps, marshes, bogs and
areas with water-loving vegetation that grows in or around water.
Xeriscape: A
landscape concept to describe beautiful landscaping that has low water
needs. The term was developed by Denver Water in 1981. It is derived
from the Greek word xeros, meaning dry.
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