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Lake Powell loses more water
#1
[url "http://www.cnn.com/2004/TECH/science/11/21/grand.canyon.ap/index.html"][black][size 2]http://www.cnn.com/2004/TECH/science/11/21/grand.canyon.ap/index.html[/size][/black][/url] Scientists flood Grand Canyon Flood waters will bring natural sediment to ecosystem
Sunday, November 21, 2004 Posted: 10:27 PM EST (0327 GMT)
[Image: 1.gif] [Image: story.canyon.flooding.ap.jpg] Water shoots into the Grand Canyon from four steel tubes at the bottom of Glen Canyon dam. [Image: 1.gif] [Image: cl_leftcorner.gif] [Image: cl_bar.gif] [url "javascript:CNN_openPopup('/services/overture/cl/frameset.exclude.html','620x430','toolbar=no,location=no,directories=no,status=no,menubar=no,scrollbars=no,resizable=no,width=620,height=430')"][/url] [Image: cl_rightcorner.gif] [Image: 1.gif] [url "http://www21.overture.com/d/sr/?xargs=05u3hs9yoakH1uuzDDRQzFf0aTeoOPRINBwKy2QNkMVQ1aFo6j2uQQSn3%2FAv12igcoBBLOL%2FklDfijy4Z7Pd4u2ptNeRI5jTxsQM4OSWlkD1eWChOImDNjW6MNO5uAlsfsgaTFYZMYyBR%2Bz9eSEqI4FNc5Tmcx5HW5oPcNYcAMCsEVMP1FaOpjaxOqJxoVTRJXy%2BX1QGpb5GdMXUvxZS%2BxTl94bU7oi5dy66LBi5%2BNumg1XFKGqpQExFPQjiturjHM2ozYx75M0Qumh2Od8%2BPvK2Lvv%2Fvgdv9BHcPvDjR%2FJfeshRvhsPJ5bw%3D%3D&yargs=www.travelaudios.com"][/url] [Image: 1.gif] [Image: 1.gif] [Image: 1.gif] [Image: 1.gif] [Image: 1.gif] [Image: 1.gif]
GRAND CANYON NATIONAL PARK, Arizona (AP) -- Scientists flooded the Grand Canyon on Sunday to restore beaches and save fish and plants that have been disappearing since sediment-free water began flowing from a man-made dam 40 years ago.
A torrent of gushing water raced down the Colorado River and into the canyon, carrying badly needed natural sediment with it, as four giant steel tubes at the base of Glen Canyon Dam were opened.
"The sediment, sand, mud and silt play an important role in the ecosystem," said Chip Groat, director for the U.S. Geological Survey.
An estimated 800,000 metric tons of sediment were expected to be stirred up during the 90-hour run.
Four decades ago, before the dam was built, natural flooding built up backwaters, eddies and sandbars with silt distributed from the Colorado's tributaries.
The construction of Glen Canyon Dam upstream forever altered the canyon: Four of eight native fish species have disappeared and prospects for the fifth, the endangered humpback chub, are grim. Only about 7 percent of the historical sediment before the dam was built remains.
Twenty experiments will be conducted during the test, including archaeological, biological and hydrological studies.
On Monday -- when the waters are expected to swell the highest -- scientists will begin a four-day rafting trip in the canyon to see what the immediate effects of the high flow test were.
In 1996, officials flooded the canyon in an 18-day water release, although only about five of those days produced high floods. The Interior Department had been studying the dam's effects on the canyon and had learned that beaches were washing away.
But scientists overestimated the sediment levels in the beds of the tributary rivers that flow into the Colorado below the dam, and sediment redeposited by some of the flooding was only eroded away by other flood waters.
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#2
i guess this is a win lose situation depending on how you look at it. thanks for the article post.
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