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Embudo Creek

Coordinates: 36°12′54″N 105°55′08″W / 36.215°N 105.919°W / 36.215; -105.919
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Embudo Creek
The mesas from which the name is derived can be seen in the background.
Embudo Creek is located in New Mexico
Embudo Creek
Location of mouth
Location
CountryUnited States
StateNew Mexico
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • locationNorth Truchas Peak
 • elevation13,024 ft (3,970 m)
Mouth 
 • location
Embudo
 • coordinates
36°12′54″N 105°55′08″W / 36.215°N 105.919°W / 36.215; -105.919
 • elevation
5,800 ft (1,800 m)
Basin size305 sq mi (790 km2)[1]
Discharge 
 • locationDixon[1]
 • average80.3 cfs (1924-2013)
 • minimum12.8 cfs (1951)
 • maximum235 cfs (1941)
Basin features
River systemRio Grande
Tributaries 
 • leftRio de las Trampas

Embudo Creek, also known as Rio Embudo, is formed by the confluence of the Rio Pueblo and Santa Barbara Creek near Peñasco in Taos County, New Mexico. The Embudo (named after the Spanish word meaning “funnel”) empties into the Rio Grande near the community of Embudo between two distinctively shaped buttes, thus creating a funnel effect.[2] Before emptying into the Rio Grande the river flows through Dixon in Rio Arriba County.[3] Irrigation canals (acequias) built in the 19th century to divert water from the headwaters of Embudo Creek are a continuing source of controversy.

Geography

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The origins of Embudo Creek are in headwaters streams, the Rio Pueblo, Rio Santa Barbara, and Rio de los Trampas near North Truchas Peak,13,024 ft (3,970 m), Jicarita Peak, 12,835 ft (3,912 m), and Trampas Peak, 12,172 ft (3,710 m), in the southern Sangre de Cristo Mountains. The headwaters of the Truchas and Santa Barbara rivers are in the Pecos Wilderness. All the rivers flow northwest and the Pueblo and Santa Barbara unite at Picuris Pueblo. The river below their union is called Embudo Creek. The Las Trampas joins the Embudo further downstream. The watershed of the Embubo and its tributaries is 28 miles (45 km) east to west and a maximum of 16 miles (26 km) north to south. The length of the Embudo from the junction of the Pueblo and Santa Barbara rivers to where the Embudo joins the Rio Grande is about 9 miles (14 km). The elevation of the Embudo where it joins the Rio Grande is about 5,800 ft (1,800 m).[4]

Most of the Embudo watershed is located in Taos County but it laps over into Rio Arriba County. The area of the watershed is 305 sq mi (790 km2). No incorporated towns or cities are in the watershed, but there are several communities: Dixon, Trampas, Peñasco, and the Picurus Pueblo are the largest. Irrigated agriculture is extensive around these communities.[5][6]

Water disputes and acequias

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Settlers on the Mora grant on the eastern side of the Sangre de Cristos have constructed gravity-fed irrigation ditches (acequias) to divert water from three headwaters sources of the Rio Pueblo to the Mora River. (The Rio Pueblo is an upstream tributary of Embudo Creek and not the same as the Rio Pueblo de Taos) The first diversion of water from Alamitos Creek was built about 1820; the second diversion from the Rito de la Presa was built in 1864; and the third and largest diversion was from the Rito Angostura. This diversion via acequias took 20 families three years to construct from 1879 to 1882. The acequia was 8 mi (13 km) long and "constructed without the benefit of sophisticated tools and engineering know-how, accomplishing the seemingly impossible task" of bringing water from one side of the mountains to the other. In drought years as much as one-half of the water of the Rio Pueblo is diverted to Mora County. In 2021, that water irrigated about 1,900 acres (770 ha) of agricultural land owned by 143 users.[7][8]

The transfer of water was controversial. The Picuris Pueblo contested the diversion of water from their territory to the Mora River as early as the 1860s and pursued a lawsuit against the diversions of water in the 1880s. The suit was dismissed as no attorney would take the case. Disputes about water continued into the 21st century. In 2021, unidentified persons blocked the acequia directing water from Alamitos Creek with a mound of rocks and interrupted the flow of water to Mora Country. The blockage was quickly removed, but the dispute over water rights continued.[9][8]

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "Embudo Creek at Dixon NM" (PDF). Water Data Report. U.S. Geological Service.
  2. ^ Pearce, T.M., ed. ‘’New Mexico Place Names: A Geographical Dictionary’’, University of New Mexico Press,Albuquerque NM 1965
  3. ^ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Embudo Creek
  4. ^ Arellano, Juan Estevan (2010). "Embudo de Picuris Watershed" (PDF). Environmental Health Consultants. pp. 118–120. Retrieved 26 December 2024.
  5. ^ Arellano 2010, pp. 118–120.
  6. ^ Jansens, Jan-Willem (2019). "Projecto Embudo de Agua Sagrado" (PDF). New Mexico Environmental Association. p. 8. Retrieved 26 December 2024.
  7. ^ Ebright, Malcolm (2017). "Making Water Run Uphill: The Mora Acequias de la Sierra vs Picuris Pueblo". New Mexico Historical Review. 92 (2): 117-118, 147. Retrieved 20 December 2024.
  8. ^ a b Benanav, Michael. "Against the Flow". Searchlight New Mexico. Retrieved 12 January 2025.
  9. ^ Ebright 2017, pp. 142–144.