Part of a series of articles titled Water Resources Monitoring in the Bighorn River near Fort Smith, Montana.
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Water Flow in the Bighorn River near Fort Smith, Montana
The U.S. Geological Survey operates two gaging stations on the Bighorn River; one station is located on the Bighorn River at Kane, WY (USGS 06279500), and the other is on the Bighorn River near Fort Smith, MT (USGS 06287800 Bighorn River near St. Xavier). The station near Fort Smith, MT, is operated in cooperation with the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation.
The Bighorn River near Fort Smith, MT, has a managed hydrograph due to operations of the Yellowtail Dam and Yellowtail Afterbay Dam. Construction of Yellowtail Dam was initiated in 1961 and completed in 1967. The unregulated, pre-dam hydrograph was characteristic of a snowmelt dominated system; the post-dam hydrograph shows a more regulated response to annual snowmelt runoff. Despite dam operations, the hydrograph for the Bighorn River near Fort Smith, MT, is generally highest in the spring with the months of April through June coinciding with the melt-off of snow at higher elevations within the watershed. Average annual peak flow between 1968 and 2019 was 7,872 cfs and on average occurred on June 9 (day 159 of the year). Minimum annual daily flows over this same period of record averaged 1,489 cfs. Peak flows in 2019 were considerably higher than the long-term average at this location.
Last updated: August 12, 2021