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Rani Chohan
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Greenbelt, Maryland
301-286-2483

NASA Earth Observatory Story

Viewable Images

TV RESOLUTION (.tif) Credit: NASA/USGS

Lake Mead - Reference w/ lables, May 2000
Lake Mead - Unlabeled, May 2000
Lake Mead - Unlabeled, May 2004

Boulder Basin - Reference w/ lables, May 2000
Boulder Basin - Reference w/ lables, May 2004
Boulder Basin - Unlabeled, May 2000
Boulder Basin - Unlabeled, May 2004

Virgin Basin - Reference w/ lables, May 2000
Virgin Basin - Unlabeled, May 2000
Virgin Basin - Unlabeled, May 2004

Gregg Basin - Reference w/ lables, May 2000
Gregg Basin - Unlabeled, May 2000
Gregg Basin - Unlabeled, May 2004

HIGH RESOLUTION (.tif 300dpi) Credit: NASA/USGS

Lake Mead - Unlabeled, May 2000 - 300dpi
Lake Mead - Unlabeled, May 2004 - 300dpi

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06/29/2004 - (date of web publication)

LAKE MEAD WATER LEVEL DROPS 2000-2004
Large image of Lake Mead with labels from May 2000
Image above: Lake Mead in 2000 with reference labels. Credit: NASA/USGS

Images of Lake Mead in May 2000 and 2004Image left: Lake Mead in 2000 (shown) and 2004 (Rollover image with mouse to see.) Credit: NASA/USGS

Water is the lifeblood of the western United States. Not only does it sustain municipal drinking supplies and agriculture, it is also one of the primary sources of electricity. Dams along the Colorado and other rivers provide the steady water supply needed for large populations and agriculture as well as the electricity needed for industry. Perhaps the greatest symbol of water use in the west is the Hoover Dam and the massive reservoir it creates, Lake Mead. Shown in this Landsat composite image, Lake Mead is one of the largest reservoirs in the world and one of the most important water sources in the western United States. Over the past few years, however, rain and snow have been scarce, and water levels in the reservoir are steadily dropping. As of June 8, 2004, the U.S. Drought Monitor had placed the southwest in extreme hydrological drought, one designation above the worst in their drought intensity scale.

The impact of the drought is apparent in the dwindling size of Lake Mead. (See Drought Lowers Lake Mead) That the vast lake has shrunk visibly in satellite imagery indicates that the drought is severe. The Colorado River enters the lake from the east, image right, and exits to the south, image bottom left. The Hoover Dam can be seen as a faint white line across the Colorado River just below the point where the river flows out of the lake. The top arm of the lake is formed by the Muddy and Virgin Rivers. The image is a natural color image made using red, green, and blue wavelengths. The Landsat 7 satellite captured the primary image on May 30, 2004. Images taken on April 28 and May 14 were used to fill in gaps in the data.

Images of the Boulder Basin of Lake Mead in May 2000 and 2004
image above: Boulder Basin of Lake Mead in 2000 (shown) and 2004 (Rollover image with mouse to see.) Notice Las Vegas Bay Marina has been moved due to the drop in water levels. Credit: NASA/USGS

This is not the most severe drought the southwest has ever endured. A five-year drought in the 1950s left many regions in the southwest so devastated that they were declared federal drought disaster areas. The current drought, which began in 1999, had been softened by a few wet years, though there has not been enough water to end the drought. Long-term climate records taken from tree rings reveal that patterns of drought are common in the southwestern United States. In the 16th century, a decades-long drought plagued the region. Other droughts, though none as severe, have occurred regularly over the past three centuries.

Images Courtesy: Jesse Allen, NASA Earth Observatory. Text Courtesy: Holli Riebeek, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center

 

 

 

 

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