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Re: Lake Mead near Las Vegas, is at its lowest level since the lake was filled after the construction of the Hoover Dam in the 1930s 

By: micro in 6TH POPE | Recommend this post (1)
Mon, 12 Jul 21 9:25 PM | 22 view(s)
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Msg. 19945 of 60008
(This msg. is a reply to 19938 by kathy_s16)

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It is a shame that so many people are so dependent upon one small river supplying water to one dammed up lake, and so many irrigated farms dependent upon that water from one source over multiple states, plus all the drinking water required for enormous population of all those same people.

Methinks some of the braintrust who was in charge of population control and housing all dependent upon lake Mead along with all the farmers who also need the water, were not exactly on top of it or had any foresight either.

But hey sure took care of the MOB in Vegas didn't they?

The southwest is by definition a Desert. Deserts by definition are places with little water and very arid, which means lack of moisture and water..

Why anyone would want to live in an area so dependent on rainfall in an area where that is not in great abundance is a little confusing to me.

I hope things take a turn for the better for y'all out there quickly.. I would suggest a whole bunch of people getting on their knees and bowing their heads and praying to ask God to provide some water.. He is the only one who controls everything and can make it happen...

Hope you will be staying cool inside withhtose windmill farms and solar panel farms in the center of America's looney Tunes land....




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The above is a reply to the following message:
Lake Mead near Las Vegas, is at its lowest level since the lake was filled after the construction of the Hoover Dam in the 1930s
By: kathy_s16
in 6TH POPE
Mon, 12 Jul 21 5:19 PM
Msg. 19938 of 60008

http://www.blabber.buzz/blab/pop/1028527-extreme-heat-is-drying-up-drinking-water-in-west-coast?utm_source=c-alrt&;utm_medium=c-alrt-email&utm_term=c-alrt-Yahoo&utm_content=681ajDFujQC3-HoOhSHkv-1kf6xg52_YvCoFtyNXJh7M.A

Extreme Heat Is Drying Up Drinking Water In West Coast

Reservoir levels are dropping throughout the West, as the drought tightens its grip on the area and strong summer heat further stresses both water supply and the encompassing landscape. Many reservoirs are at or approaching historic low levels due to lackluster rainy seasons combined with rising temperatures due to climate change.

The drought emergency is perhaps most apparent in the Colorado River basin, which marked one of its driest years on record, after two decades of less-than-adequate flows. The country's biggest reservoir, Lake Mead near Las Vegas, is at its lowest level since the lake was filled after the construction of the Hoover Dam in the 1930s; it now sits at 1,069 feet above sea level, or 35% of its entire capacity. It provides water to Arizona, Nevada, California, and Mexico.

Further upstream, Lake Powell, which supplies Lake Mead, is at just 34% of its entire capacity.

By next spring, Lake Powell is predicted to hit its lowest level since it was filled in 1964, potentially jeopardizing its ability to produce power.


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