Cover title., "Produced by Colorado Agricultural Water Alliance. Made possible by a grant from the Colorado Water Conservation Board.", Mode of access: World Wide Web.
"Date Created: April 25, 2003. Revised: April 1, 2005. Author: Various. Parks affected: All.", Bibliography: page 4., Description based on online resource; title from PDF caption; (viewed January 2015)
This report summarizes current and past Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission (COGCC) requirements in the Piceance Basin Bradenhead Monitoring Area (BMA) and nearby areas to the north and east; it outlines planned changes to requirements for cement isolation during primary cementing of casing strings, during remediation when bradenhead pressure or flow thresholds have been exceeded, and during plugging of wells. This report generally discusses new requirements as they apply to all fields referenced in this report. Requirements discusses for each field are defined more specifically on Field Scout Cards and Isolation Wellbore Diagrams, included as Appendix A. Appendix A also includes field type logs, annotated by COGCC Staff, to create a consistent standard in and around the BMA for geologic isolation., by David Andrews., "April 18, 2016.", COGCC Document Number 2056199., Online resource; title from PDF cover (viewed June 2016)
"HPCA _37.5K_4/14"--Back panel., "Funded in part by Great Outdoors Colorado through Colorado Lottery proceeds."--Back panel., Caption title., Print version record.
"Retitled update and expansion of Colorado Division of Wildlife Technical publication no. 38, Descriptions and identification of razorback, flannelmouth, white, Utah, bluehead, and mountain sucker larvae and early juveniles.", "DOW-R-T-42-04.", "September 2004.", Includes bibliographical references (p. 102-110)., Mode of access: World Wide Web.
A group of almost two dozen land managers, landowners, state and federal agency representatives, and scientists came together to develop a scientific/technical assessment of the conservation needs for the Central Shortgrass Prairie ecoregion. The Central Shortgrass Prairie ecoregion encompasses approximately 56 million acres and stretches across all of eastern Colorado, portions of southeastern Wyoming, western Kansas and Nebraska, the Panhandles of Oklahoma and Texas, and northeastern New Mexico. The conservation of the Central Shortgrass Prairie ecoregion is important because the temperate grasslands are one of the least protected major habitat types on Earth; less than 5% is protected globally. Temperate grasslands also are among the most highly converted habitats on Earth., "November 2006.", "This project was made possible by financial support from the Department of Defense Legacy Resource Management Program, Colorado Division of Wildlife and The Nature Conservancy. Other key participants included Colorado Association of Conservation Districts, Colorado Natural Heritage Program, Colorado State Land Board, Comanche National Grassland and Pawnee National Grassland, US Forest Service, Environmental Protection Agency, Directorate of Environmental Compliance and Management, Fort Carson, Natural Resources Conservation Service, NatureServe, Playa Lakes Joint Venture, Rocky Mountain Bird Observatory, and US Fish and Wildlife Service.", Includes bibliographical references (pages 117-124)., Online resource; title from PDF cover (viewed October 2016)
prepared for Colorado Water Conservation Board ; prepared by Resource Consultants, Inc., "April 15, 1981.", "Ref: 1048.", Online resource; title from PDF cover (viewed July 2020)