Is the Drought in the West more than just a phase?
Posted: Sat May 08, 2004 11:08 pm
From the NY Times.
At five years and counting the drought that has parched much of the West is getting much harder to shrug off as a blip.
Politicians, scientists, business leaders, city planners and environmentalists who worry about the future fo the West are increasingly realizing that a world of eternally blue skies a nd meager mountain snowpacks may not be a passing phenomenon but rather the return to a harsh climatic norm.
Continuing research into drought cycles over the last 800 years bears this out, strongly suggesting that the relatively wet weather during the 20th century was a fluke....The period since 1999 is now officially the driest in the 98 years of recorded history of the Colorado River, according to the US Geological Survey.
Lake Powell is at 40 percent of it's normal capacity or about the size it was in 1973 when it was still filling up.
Comments?? This could have MAJOR MAJOR IMPLICATIONS ALL OVER THE WEST!!!
At five years and counting the drought that has parched much of the West is getting much harder to shrug off as a blip.
Politicians, scientists, business leaders, city planners and environmentalists who worry about the future fo the West are increasingly realizing that a world of eternally blue skies a nd meager mountain snowpacks may not be a passing phenomenon but rather the return to a harsh climatic norm.
Continuing research into drought cycles over the last 800 years bears this out, strongly suggesting that the relatively wet weather during the 20th century was a fluke....The period since 1999 is now officially the driest in the 98 years of recorded history of the Colorado River, according to the US Geological Survey.
Lake Powell is at 40 percent of it's normal capacity or about the size it was in 1973 when it was still filling up.
Comments?? This could have MAJOR MAJOR IMPLICATIONS ALL OVER THE WEST!!!