I wonder how the climate change deniers will spin and handle this news?
I KNOW --- become even MORE anti-science. These folks who use ALL the latest technology - without having a clue how it works, will just deny any damn thing THEY WANT ------- damn the consequences!
Please follow link to original.
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http://news.yahoo.com/satellites-show-major-southwest-groundwater-105431089.html
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) --
Groundwater losses from the Colorado River basin appear massive enough
to challenge long-term water supplies for the seven states and parts of
Mexico that it serves, according to a new study released Thursday that
used NASA satellites.
Researchers
from NASA and the University of California, Irvine say their study is
the first to quantify how much groundwater people in the West are using
during the region's current drought.
Stephanie
Castle, the study's lead author and a water resource specialist at the
University of California, Irvine, called the extent of the groundwater
depletion "shocking."
"We didn't realize the magnitude of how much water we actually depleted" in the West, Castle said.
Since
2004, researchers said, the Colorado River basin — the largest in the
Southwest — has lost 53 million acre feet, or 17 trillion gallons, of
water. That's enough to supply more than 50 million households for a
year, or nearly fill Lake Mead — the nation's largest water reservoir —
twice.
Three-fourths of those losses were groundwater, the study found.
Unlike reservoirs and
other above-ground water, groundwater sources can become so depleted
that they may never refill, Castle said. For California and other
western states, the groundwater depletion is drawing down the reserves
that protect consumers, farmers and ecosystems in times of drought.
"What happens if it isn't there?" Castle said during a phone interview. "That's the scary part of this analysis."
The
NASA and University of California research used monthly gravity data to
measure changes in water mass in the basin from December 2004 to
November of last year, and used that data to track groundwater
depletion.
"Combined with
declining snowpack and population growth, this will likely threaten the
long-term ability of the basin to meet its water-allocation commitments
to the seven basin states and to Mexico, Jay Famiglietti, senior author
on the study and senior water-cycle specialist at NASA's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory, said in a statement.
The
Colorado River basin supplies water to about 40 million people and 4
million acres of farmland in seven states — California, Arizona,
Colorado, New Mexico, Nevada, Utah and Wyoming — as well as to people
and farms in part of Mexico.
California,
one of the nation's largest agricultural producers, is three years into
drought. While the state has curtailed use of surface water, the state
lacks a statewide system for regulating — or even measuring —
groundwater.
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