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Wyoming's Platte River Basin Groundwater

 
 

One of the purposes of the Platte River Basin Plan is to identify potential aquifers and well sites in the basin that may be suitable for future development. An important criterion for identifying prospective basin groundwater supplies is whether new groundwater supply wells are hydrologically connected with the North Platte River or tributary surface waters.

The first objective of this investigation was to inventory and document existing published groundwater data, studies, and planning documents for the planning area. A second objective of this investigation was to inventory and catalog the Wyoming State EngineerÆs Office groundwater permit database for various categories of groundwater use in the planning area. This data was then incorporated into the GIS data layer for each subbasin. A third objective of this investigation has been to characterize the origin and current status of ongoing water right interference claims and the development status of the three basin groundwater control areas, including the Prairie Center Control Area, the Laramie County Control Area, and the Platte County Control Area.

Other objectives of this study included:

  • Characterizing the aquifers of the planning area with regard to location, storage, and yield based on existing information;

  • Summarizing the potential for additional groundwater development and aquifer storage, and any potential impacts to the groundwater and surface water systems in the planning area; and

  • Characterizing coalbed natural gas (methane) development and its short and long-term effects on groundwater and surface water supplies within subbasins of the planning area

The Lower Laramie subbasin covers an area of approximately 2,652 square miles in southeastern Wyoming. The principal river system is the Laramie River, which includes Chugwater Creek, Sybille Creek, Fish Creek, and their respective tributaries. Geologic formations vary in thickness and range from Precambrian crystalline bedrock to alluvial deposits. The geologic structures are primarily portions of the Laramie Mountains uplift, Hartville uplift, and Denver-Julesburg basin.

 

 
 


The Platte River Basin Plan is a planning tool developed for the Wyoming Water Development Office. It presents estimated current and estimated future uses of water in WyomingÆs Platte River Basin. The Plan is not used to determine compliance with or administration of state law, federal law, court decrees, interstate compacts, or interstate agreements.
Wyoming Water Development Commission
6920 Yellowtail Road
Cheyenne, Wyoming 82002
Ph. (307) 777-7626
Fax (307) 777-6819