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Reel 1 Volume 0.1-0.2 - Page 99

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Title No. 15, Original. In the Supreme Court of the United States. October Term, 1929. The United States of America, Plaintiff, v. The State of Utah, Defendant. Digest of Testimony taken before Charles Warren, Special Master. APPENDIX to Brief for the United States
Creator United States. Supreme Court; Warren, Charles
Subject Mines and mineral resources -- Environmental aspects -- Utah; United States -- Trials, litigation, etc.; Utah -- Trials, litigation, etc.; Utah -- Trials, litigation, etc.; Utah -- Trials, litigation, etc.; Colorado River (Colo.-Mexico); Colorado River (Colo.-Mexico) -- Environmental aspects
Description Transcripts of the Colorado Riverbed Case
Publisher Digitized by J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah
Date 1929
Type Text
Format application/pdf
Format Creation Scans of microfilm taken from the originals were used to transcribe the text, pdf's generated from transcriptions.
Identifier Reel1-Vol0.1-0.2.pdf
Language eng
Relation is part of Colorado Riverbed Case
Spatial Coverage Colorado; Utah; Mexico
Rights Management Digital image Copyright 2009, University of Utah. All Rights Reserved.
Bit Depth 8 bit grayscale
ARK ark:/87278/s6rj4m4m
Setname usa_crc
ID 119204
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6rj4m4m

Page Metadata

Title Reel 1 Volume 0.1-0.2 - Page 99
Format application/pdf
OCR Text 95 -- 91-- " Q That is as it was actually surveyed? " A That is, as it was actually surveyed. " Q Then, what do you mean by ' probably rapids,' and ' probably straight, clear water?' " A Well, the green stretches are placed where the slope is such that, during low water stage, it is rapid water. As the flow increases, they run more or less into the rapids. For instance, as the stage changes in the river, certain stretches that may be quiet water become rapid water, and certain that may be rapid water become rapids. Now, these conditions shown on here ( indicating map) are ordinary low- water conditions of the river. Q Well, what you have marked in red shows what is your estimate of the conditions at some other stage of the water? A No; that is the rapid as shown at the low water. R. 204- 205. The profiles themselves are the basis from which all the information is obtained. " These profiles ( indicating), as you will notice here, are simply taken at places where there were rapids shown by the profile, and compared with the plan in order to get a picture of the river." R. 2005. He has seen the first, second and third rapids in Cataract Canyon. The records of the Interior Department disclose certain rapids as existing in what is referred to an Cataract Canyon, and they have names, and their general
Setname usa_crc
ID 119136
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6rj4m4m/119136