KANSAS Where We Are

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KANSAS Where We Are nationalatlas.gov TM KANSAS Where We Are FEDERAL LANDS AND IOWA INDIAN RESERVATIONS CO M i s NEBRASKA s o Bureau of Indian Affairs u ri Bureau of Reclamation Sac And Fox Iowa Indian Reservation Department of Defense Indian Reservation (includes Army Corps of Engineers lakes) MO Hiawatha R Fish and Wildlife Service / Wilderness Norton Marysville i St Francis Oberlin Lebanon Lovewell Kickapoo v Keith Sebelius Kirwin Reservoir e National Wildlife Refuge Indian Reservation r Forest Service / Wilderness Lake Concordia Fort Leavenworth National Park Service / Wilderness Tuttle Creek Potawatomi IR Colby Stockton Goodland Hill City Waconda Clay Center Lake Webster Lake Leavenworth Some small sites are not shown, especially in Reservoir urban areas. Manhattan Perry Lake Oakley Milford Fort Riley R Kansas City Sal Topeka MILES WaKeeney ine River Lake Lawrence 0 20 40 60 80 Forbes AFB Cedar Bluff Abilene as Overland Park Albers equal area projection Russell Wilson ns Clinton Lake Reservoir Lake Salina Ka Sunflower Sm H River Pomona Army Ammunition oky ill Smoky Hill Council Grove Plant Abbreviations Lake Melvern Lake Ottawa Kanopolis Air Force Range Lake AFB Air Force Base Scott City Lake Emporia Marais Des Cygnes IR Indian Reservation NWR Great Bend Marion NWR National Wildlife Refuge Lake Tallgrass Prairie Flint Hills NWR Fort Larned National Preserve Garnett National Historic Site Larned John Redmond Quivira NWR Reservoir Jetmore Hutchinson Newton Syracuse Garden City River Kinsley Cheney El Dorado Yates Center El Dorado Lake Toronto Fort Scott Ark Dodge City Reservoir ansas Wichita Lake Chanute Ulysses Pratt Kingman Fall River McConnell Lake Fredonia Sublette Air Force Base Pittsburg Elk City Parsons Lake Meade Medicine Lodge Winfield Cimarron National Wellington Independence Kansas Grassland Ashland Copan Army Ammunition Elkhart Liberal Arkansas City Lake Coffeyville Plant OKLAHOMA TEXAS U.S. Department of the Interior OR U.S. Geological Survey The National Atlas of the United States of America pagefed_ks6.pdf INTERIOR-GEOLOGICAL SURVEY, RESTON, VIRGINIA-2003.
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  • Kansas River Basin Model
    Kansas River Basin Model Edward Parker, P.E. US Army Corps of Engineers Kansas City District KANSAS CITY DISTRICT NEBRASKA IOWA RATHBUN M I HARLAN COUNTY S S I LONG S S I SMITHVILLE BRANCH P TUTTLE P CREEK I URI PERRY SSO K MI ANS AS R I MILFORD R. V CLINTON E WILSON BLUE SPRINGS R POMONA LONGVIEW HARRY S. TRUMAN R COLO. KANOPOLIS MELVERN HILLSDALE IV ER Lake of the Ozarks STOCKTON KANSAS POMME DE TERRE MISSOURI US Army Corps of Engineers Kansas City District Kansas River Basin Operation Challenges • Protect nesting Least Terns and Piping Plovers that have taken residence along the Kansas River. • Supply navigation water support for the Missouri River. • Reviewing requests from the State of Kansas and the USBR to alter the standard operation to improve support for recreation, irrigation, fish & wildlife. US Army Corps of Engineers Kansas City District Model Requirements • Model Period 1/1/1920 through 12/31/2000 • Six-Hour routing period • Forecast local inflow using recession • Use historic pan evaporation – Monthly vary pan coefficient • Parallel and tandem operation • Consider all authorized puposes • Use current method of flood control US Army Corps of Engineers Kansas City District Model PMP Revisions • Model period from 1/1/1929 through 12/30/2001 • Mean daily flows for modeling rather than 6-hour data derived from mean daily flow values. • Delete the requirement to forecast future hydrologic conditions. • Average monthly lake evaporation rather than daily • Utilize a standard pan evaporation coefficient of 0.7 rather than a monthly varying value. • Separate the study basin between the Smoky River Basin and the Republican/Kansas River Basin.
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  • Lake Level Management Plans Water Year 2019
    LAKE LEVEL MANAGEMENT PLANS WATER YEAR 2019 Kansas Water Office September 2018 Table of Contents U.S. ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS, KANSAS CITY DISTRICT .................................................................................................................................... 3 CLINTON LAKE ........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................4 HILLSDALE LAKE ......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................6 KANOPOLIS LAKE .....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................8 MELVERN LAKE .....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................10 MILFORD LAKE ......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................12
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  • Class G Tables of Geographic Cutter Numbers: Maps -- by Region Or
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  • KDHE Confirmed Zebra Mussel Waterbodies
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  • Lake Level Management Plans Water Year 2018
    LAKE LEVEL MANAGEMENT PLANS WATER YEAR 2018 Kansas Water Office 2017 Table of Contents CORPS OF ENGINEERS, KANSAS CITY DISTRICT ...................................................................................................................................................................................................... 3 CLINTON LAKE .............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................. 5 HILLSDALE LAKE ............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................ 7 KANOPOLIS LAKE .......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................... 9 MILFORD LAKE ............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................ 13 POMONA LAKE ..........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
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  • 2005 1St Quarter
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  • 2006 1St Quarter
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  • Kansas Lake and Wetland Monitoring Program 2016 Annual Report
    KANSAS LAKE AND WETLAND MONITORING PROGRAM 2016 ANNUAL REPORT Division of Environment Bureau of Water Watershed Planning, Monitoring, and Assessment Section 1000 SW Jackson Street, Suite 420 Topeka, KS 66612 By G. Layne Knight December 15, 2017 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE) Lake and Wetland Monitoring Program surveyed the water quality conditions of 40 Kansas lakes and wetlands during 2016. Eight of the sampled waterbodies are large federal impoundments, ten are State Fishing Lakes (SFLs), eighteen are city and county lakes, three are federal wetland areas, and one is a state wetland area. In addition, a single sample was taken from Big Spring; a prominent water resource at Scott State Park. Of the 33 lakes and wetlands analyzed for chlorophyll concentrations, 74% exhibited trophic state conditions comparable to their previous period-of-record water quality conditions. Another 13% exhibited improved water quality conditions, compared to their previous period-of-record, as evidenced by a lowered lake trophic state. The remaining 13% exhibited degraded water quality, as evidenced by elevated lake trophic state conditions. Phosphorus was identified as the primary factor limiting phytoplankton growth in 50% of the lakes surveyed during 2016, nitrogen was identified as the primary limiting factor in about 20% of the lakes and wetlands, while five lakes (15%) were identified as primarily light limited due to higher inorganic turbidity. Two lakes were determined to be limited by hydrologic conditions and one lake had algal limitation due to extreme macrophyte densities. Limiting factors were unable to be determined for the remaining two lakes.
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  • December, 2002 Newsletter.Pmd
    The Kansas Trails Council Building and Maintaining Kansas Trails Since 1974 Volume XXVIII No. 3 Newsletter December, 2002 Best Wishes For a Happy and prosperous New Year! Clinton Lake Photo Run babies had not fled with her as I had approached By Michael Goodwin the ravine. Torn between her instinct to flee and the urge to protect her young, she simply stood White tail deer are common around many there watching me, waiting. Kansas lakes. At Clinton Lake they most often After what seemed like many minutes, I finally can be seen with tails flared like white flags as they remembered the camera hanging from my shoulder. bound away from hikers, runners or bikers. Not Scenes like this one are the very reason I had so on this September day. recently started taking my camera with me on trail I had been running for about 30 minutes on the runs. Apparently, the fawn had been patiently Blue Trail at Clinton Lake when I descended into a waiting for me to come to my senses and begin the shallow, rocky ravine near the water. Trail running photo session. After three photos and the associated , requires continuous concentration on the next ten clicks of the shutter, the fawn slowly turned and feet of trail in order to avoid face plants, twisted walked up the ravine to her waiting mother and ankles or worse. As I focused on the oncoming brother. rocks, in my peripheral vision I noticed something Exhilarated, I walked slowly along the trail until moving through the nearby trees on my right.
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  • KS State Parks Guide Booklet
    KKaannssaass SSttaattee PPaarrkkss Cross Timbers State Park KaMnosreaTshaSn MteaettseThPe aEyre ks: he Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks manages 24 state parks across the state. Most provide utility and primitive camping, and access to reservoirs, trails, and wildlife areas. A few Tare preserved natural areas, allowing visitors to enjoy unspoiled wild Kansas. Many parks host annual events such as concerts, festivals, and com - petitions. Whatever your outdoor interest — hiking, camping, wildlife observation, fishing, bike riding, horseback riding, hunting, or just plain relaxing, a Kansas state park has what you’re looking for. If you’ve never been to a Kansas state park, use this guide to find the nearest one. Visit our website for current park fees at www.kdwp.state.ks.us or call one of the offices listed in the back of this publica - tion. If you haven’t visited a state park recently, look again. There’s a rich collection of outdoor adventures waiting for you. Cross Timbers State Park El Dorado State Park 2 ) (B S P ) A - Available U (B K S S O P B - Available at extra charge O U E H K S C - Limited times . O K N ) C C O ) ) R O (B I LE H B (B A TI D - Fishing boats only S E ( S A ) L V IC Y S E S S M T B A A & R L E T ) E K ) D S S ( IC H E - In non-state areas R E , T N IT I (B E N C (B N E S C R R C O S S S A N A S G N TR A E A E E E P U L O L O L U IN I E S F W L L Y L M D A I L O B C B S E O E E A IT B A O P Y T T A N A E R S IC L A C H M S N A C H A C L G C R , & I V - R A E G E T I R E L E IN A E R R R T R A E R T IN R
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  • Walking Trails Near Lawrence
    WALKING TRAILS NEAR LAWRENCE Outside for a Better Inside Trail (0.5 mi one way). This paved path goes around a lovely lake with a small island. The West trailhead starts at the 1870s stone building which was part of the Walruff Brewery where families would enjoy the facilities and children would play croquet while fathers sipped beer. The trail joins the Burcham-Constance Park Trail at 2nd & Indiana St. just over the railroad tracks. The West trailhead is located where Maine Street dead-ends north of the Lawrence Memorial Hospital. The east trailhead is located at near 2nd and Indiana Sts. Burcham-Constance Parks Trail (1 mile one way). Although this trail is just a couple of blocks from downtown Lawrence, it is worlds away in terms of leaving the hustle and bustle of the city behind for a lush forest along the Kaw River. Trailheads are located in Burcham Park at 2nd and Indiana Streets and Contant Park at 6th and Kentucky Streets. Many people walk or jog along the trail in the early morning before they go to work and others have lunch along the riverbank under a willow. This trail is great for those who do not wish to travel far to enjoy nature. The trail traverses through a natural floodplain forest containing huge specimens of eastern cottonwood and sandbar willow trees. An interesting “swamp” is hidden two hundred yards West of the trail. Evidence of beaver can be seen along the river and, in winter, bald eagles are often seen flying above the river near the Mass.
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