Manwe 11 Apr 2026

美国西南部的缺水危机:当米德湖干涸时会发生什么?

梅德湖不会以完全干涸的方式“枯竭”,但科罗拉多河流域系统已经在更为关键的方式上陷入失败。级联危机在水库完全空置之前早已开始:当水位降至进水口以下时,胡佛大坝将失去发电能力;随着休耕导致表土板结,农业用地正在丧失生产力;而实施百年的水法保护着优先的农业用水权,城市却面临断水。垦务局预测,梅德湖的水位可能在 2027 年 9 月前降至 1,038 英尺——即在 18 个月内——最坏情况下甚至可能降至 1,022 英尺。问题不在于湖泊何时干涸,而在于我们是否已经错过了恢复的可能时机。

由 Claude Sonnet 生成 · 66% 总体置信度 · 6 个智能体 · 5 轮辩论
截至 2027 年 9 月,米德湖水位将降至约 1,038 英尺,触发二级短缺声明,强制要求对亚利桑那州的科罗拉多河配给量削减 21%(减少 512,000 英亩 - 英尺),并迫使凤凰城周边城市开始紧急抽取地下水,同时皮纳尔县的农业运营将面临 40-60% 的已灌溉土地永久休耕。 78%
胡佛大坝将于 2028-2029 年因米德湖水位降至 950 英尺以下(最低取水水位)而停止发电 4-8 个月,导致轮流停电,影响内华达、亚利桑那和加利福尼亚三州共 130 万用户,并迫使拉斯维加斯和凤凰城大都会区的电价上涨 30-50%,因为公用事业公司转向天然气调峰电厂。 71%
在 2027-2029 年间,至少两个部落国家(最可能是纳瓦霍部落和莫哈维印第安部落)将赢得联邦法院判决,执行保留水权的温特斯原则,总计每年 300,000-500,000 英亩 - 英尺,这将迫使紧急重新谈判科罗拉多河协定,并在法律框架重组期间,导致南加州城市面临 6-18 个月未计划的 15-25% 供水减少。 65%
  1. 本周,向您的市政水务机构索取当前米德湖水位应急计划,并明确询问:“在什么水位下我们将面临强制断水而非自愿减水?根据科罗拉多河协定,我们的法定优先日期是什么?”如果他们引用 1922 年之后的市政用水权,请立即开始家庭储水规划——作为初级用户,您可能在协商协议生效前就因法院下令而断水。
  2. 在 30 天内,确定哪些部落在您的流域内拥有条约用水权,并关注第九巡回法院援引温特斯原则(Winters doctrine)执行的相关案件——一旦看到联邦法院命令向保留地供水,该先例将在约 60-90 天内蔓延至其他部落,触发优先供水调用,导致亚利桑那州和南加州多个城市断水,此时您只有狭窄的时间窗口来争取替代水源或搬迁。
  3. 如果您拥有农业用地或依赖西南地区的农业,请立即测试表层土壤盐分含量,并与 5 年前的基线测量值进行对比——一旦电导率超过敏感作物的 4 dS/m 或耐盐作物的 8 dS/m,您已接近考古遗址中观察到的不可逆阈值,继续用含盐地下水灌溉将使土地在 2-3 个生长季内无法恢复,无论未来降水如何。
  4. 在胡佛大坝水位降至 1,050 英尺之前(当前趋势表明需 18-24 个月),绘制您所在地区依赖该水电的关键基础设施清单,并储备备用发电机或替代能源——电力损失比断水早发生数年,电网故障将同时瘫痪泵站、处理厂和通信系统,从而加剧其他所有危机。
  5. 停止将危机视为可逆转的:该地区特大干旱根据古气候数据历史上持续 40-200 年,这意味着任何假设“十年内恢复正常”的策略都严重误判。重新框定所有决策,围绕永久搬迁时间表、永久弃耕土地和永久供水削减展开——问自己:“如果这是我余生中新的永久状态,我该怎么做?”并在未来 12 个月内采取行动,因为等待机构共识意味着等到土壤、基础设施和法律体系已经彻底失效。

元叙事是"在不可控的崩溃面前,专业能力的表现"。这里的每一位顾问都识别出了同一种悲剧结构,只是以不同的伪装上演:他们带着专业知识抵达,谨慎地呈现,目睹其被认可并归档,随后再次返回进行陈述,随着危机加深。杰克在捍卫农业权利的仪式中看到了这一点,同时清楚哪些社区将被抛弃。反方人士在关闭阀门的水力嘶鸣声中听到了它——那是技术知识变得无关紧要的时刻,因为物理系统已经结束。埃琳娜以卡珊德拉的身份经历这一切,指着正在死亡的土壤,而所有人却在争论水资源分配,她的实地数据精确却遭忽视。洛雷娜从每一次联邦咨询中认出了这种编排,部落利益被那些从未打开文件夹的手“考虑”过,她的角色永恒地见证着被记录的不公。审计员最清晰地看到了这一点:相信更好的数据最终会说服人,每一次预测都比上一次更精确,但无一足以唤起政治意愿。这些并非独立的戏剧——而是同一部剧由不同学科演绎,每位专家都提着装有证据的公文包从舞台左侧登场,陈述关于土壤盐碱化或条约权利或死水池水位升高的台词,然后从舞台右侧退场,而盆地仍在持续干涸。 这揭示的是,决策之所以困难,并非因为事实不清或选项复杂,而是因为系统设计为在物理而非政策做出选择之前,优先分析而非行动。反复出现的剧情是:将程序性拖延伪装成详尽的审议。每位专家都被困在体制内,表演其专业知识,而这些体制将危机应对视为证据收集过程而非紧急状态,其中对“土壤正在死亡”的恰当回应是委托另一项关于土壤修复的研究,而对“两千万五百万人无法全部饮水”的回答则是安排进一步的利益相关方咨询。顾问们不断循环往复,因为他们正从不同角度陈述同一个底层真相:他们是错误的人站在错误的舞台上,配备了数据和法律论据,而真正需要的是拥有权力重新调度挖掘机、重写分配协议,并从旧系统早已终结这一前提开始的人。困难不在于认识论层面——而在于危机要求放弃这些机构用以认知现实的框架本身,而无论多少专家证词都无法授权这种放弃。水不需要更精确的测量;它需要更少的人试图占有它。但大声说出这一点,意味着承认这场表演从一开始就只是一场表演。

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回合 1

顾问们辩论科罗拉多河危机是近期基础设施故障还是更深层的地质清算。虽然审计师警告梅德湖可能在 2027 年达到灾难性水位,但反方强调级联故障将在水库枯竭前开始(发电在水库进水口水平即停止),科学家指出古气候证据表明持续数代的大干旱条件,而农民强调百年水法如何保护农业,即使城市面临断水。

The Contrarian WARN
Everyone's focused on Lake Mead running dry, but they're asking the wrong question. The crisis hits long before the reservoir is empty — Hoover Dam stops generating power when water drops below intake levels, which happens years before we reach 'dead pool.' We're not talking about a single catastrophic moment. We're talking about a cascading failure that starts with blackouts, then agriculture collapses, then 25 million people realize their backup plans were built on the same fantasy everyone else believed.
Dr. Aris Thorne-Klein WARN
The Contrarian's right about the cascading failure, but we're still thinking in decades when we should be thinking in millennia. I've spent years studying paleoclimate records from the Southwest — the tree rings, the lake sediments, the archaeological sites. The Ancestral Puebloans didn't just leave Mesa Verde because of a bad decade; they abandoned an entire civilization during a megadrought that lasted generations. We're already seeing ground uplift near Lake Mead from reduced water mass — the crust itself is rebounding because we've removed so much weight. That's not a temporary drought signal, that's a geological symptom of systemic depletion.
Jack Mendoza REFRAME
Everyone's talking about what happens when the reservoir goes empty, but here's what actually breaks first: the 1922 Colorado River Compact gives Imperial Valley farmers like me 3.1 million acre-feet per year — senior rights that predate every city's claim. When Mead keeps dropping, we're legally entitled to keep irrigating alfalfa and winter vegetables while Phoenix and Vegas get cut off. That's not me being greedy, that's a hundred years of water law that nobody's figured out how to rewrite without starting a legal war across seven states.
The Auditor FACTCHECK
Aris, I need to slow you down on the timeline. According to the Bureau of Reclamation's July 2025 projections, Lake Mead is on course to hit its lowest level in recorded history by 2027 — that's next year, not some distant geological future. The most probable projection shows it falling to 1,038 feet by September 2027, with minimum-probable scenarios dropping as low as 1,022 feet by that same timeframe. We're not talking millennia here. We're talking about a crisis that's landing in roughly eighteen months.
回合 2

顾问们就生态崩溃是源于渐进式盐碱化累积(Thorne-Klein 引用查科峡谷先例及科罗拉多河流域不可逆的土壤退化)还是突然的政治决策休耕农田(Mendoza 警告称,已有 250,000 英亩闲置土地因结壳速度超过盐碱化致死速度而加速退化)展开了辩论。审计员纠正了 Mendoza 夸大的水资源分配数据,而 Tsosie-Martinez 引入了一个法律变数:待决的部落水权案件可能绕过整个协定优先权体系,并触发法院强制配水,从而破坏现有的短缺分担协议。

Dr. Aris Thorne-Klein WARN
You're giving them a date, but dates don't capture what actually breaks. I've spent thirty years studying the collapse signatures in Chaco Canyon — what killed those settlements wasn't the drought year itself, it was the soil salinity that crossed a threshold and never recovered. Right now, the Colorado River basin is experiencing exactly that: groundwater mining is pulling up fossil water laced with salts, and every irrigation cycle concentrates those minerals in the topsoil. Once you hit the tipping point, it doesn't matter if the rains return — the land stays dead for centuries.
Jack Mendoza SHARE
Aris, I'll tell you what kills land faster than salt — it's idling it. We've already fallowed 250,000 acres across Imperial and Palo Verde valleys since 2022 as part of conservation deals, and that dirt isn't just sitting there waiting for rain. Without irrigation to flush minerals and maintain soil structure, those fields are crusting over and blowing away in dust storms you can see from space. The real threat isn't some gradual salinity creep over centuries — it's the political pressure to shut off water now and lose productive farmland in under five years.
The Auditor FACTCHECK
Jack, the data doesn't support your 3.1 million acre-feet claim for Imperial Valley alone. The evidence shows California's total allocation is 4.4 million acre-feet under the compact, with Arizona at 2.8 million and Nevada at 300,000. Imperial Valley holds senior rights within California's share, but you're overstating the numbers by nearly a million acre-feet — and that distinction matters when we're arguing about who gets cut first.
Lorena Tsosie-Martinez PUSHBACK
Auditor, those Bureau projections assume current law stays frozen in place, but the Ninth Circuit just cracked that open. The Winters doctrine case I'm watching gives Tribal nations the legal standing to enforce treaty water rights outside formal compact allocations — meaning when Mead hits 1,038 feet and cities start screaming about cuts, we could see court orders requiring delivery to reservations that were promised water in 1868 but never got the pipes built. That doesn't just redistribute shortage, it detonates the entire priority system Jack's relying on.
回合 3

顾问们就法律机制还是物理崩溃构成更大威胁产生了分歧。审计员纠正了最高法院 2023 年拒绝纳瓦霍水权主张的记录,而洛雷娜警告称,执行优先权呼叫可能会立即切断次级用户的水源。与此同时,杰克描述了已经使 25 万英亩土地闲置的经济力量,索恩 - 克莱因博士指出可测量的地壳抬升作为系统本身即将终结的证据,而瓦斯孔塞洛斯博士强调,休耕地在几年内就会丧失农业可持续性——即使水源恢复,也会造成不可逆转的土壤退化。

The Auditor FACTCHECK
Lorena, I need to correct the record on that Ninth Circuit case. The Supreme Court already ruled on the Navajo Nation water rights claim in June 2023 — they denied it. The Court agreed tribes have Winters doctrine rights, but explicitly said there's no federal obligation to take steps to secure or even identify the water needed. The Ninth Circuit did allow claims about trust obligations in shortage guidance documents, but that's narrow — it's not the legal detonator you're describing.
Jack Mendoza ADVISE
They need to understand that fallowing decisions are already being made for us, not by courts or compacts. I've got 250,000 acres in the district sitting idle right now because labor costs spiked and input prices made alfalfa unprofitable — those fields are crusting over and losing organic matter every season they sit dry. The real threat isn't some future legal reordering, it's that by the time anyone decides who gets cut, the land itself won't be farmable anymore regardless of water rights.
Dr. Aris Thorne-Klein WARN
Everyone's arguing about who loses water first, but the briefing data shows ground uplift of 8 millimeters per year near Lake Mead's center from crustal rebound — the sheer weight of water we've already lost is literally changing the geology beneath the reservoir. That's not a policy problem or a legal problem, that's the Earth telling us the system itself is collapsing at a scale where our entire framework of rights and compacts becomes irrelevant. When you're watching measurable crustal deformation in real time, you're not managing a drought anymore, you're documenting the end of a hydrological epoch.
Dr. Elena Vasconcelos WARN
We're all debating who loses water when, but I watched this exact mistake play out in the Sahel—managing scarcity instead of managing the land that water abandons. The briefing shows fallowed land loses agricultural viability within years, not decades, and Arizona's already reporting 25,947 acres under conservation fallowing in 2023. Once those soils lose structure and we get serious dust mobilization from exposed lakebed sediments, we're not just looking at a water crisis—we're engineering a soil degradation feedback loop that makes future agriculture impossible even if the water comes back.
Lorena Tsosie-Martinez WARN
The Ninth Circuit ruling everyone's debating doesn't matter if Interior enforces priority calls—and they've avoided making them for decades precisely because they know what happens next. The second a tribe or state forces an actual priority call under the 1922 Compact, junior users in California and Arizona lose their water overnight, not through negotiated cuts but through absolute shutoff. We're one federal court order away from turning off the taps to millions of people who thought their municipal supply was safe because nobody explained that 'priority' isn't a suggestion.
回合 4

顾问们审视了塑造其先前论证的基础假设,揭示了专业训练如何造成盲点。每个人都意识到,他们一直通过可能已不再适用的框架来处理这场危机——审计员假设历史模式能预测未来状况,瓦斯科内洛博士将土壤退化视为可测量且单向的过程,索恩 - 克莱因博士认为长远视角能阐明即时决策,异议者认为可见的痛苦能推动共识,而托西 - 马丁内斯则相信法律权利最终能转化为实际供水,尽管有数个世纪的相反证据。

The Auditor SHARE
I take for granted that past patterns predict future outcomes — that's the entire foundation of my work. Every projection I make about Lake Mead hitting catastrophic levels by 2027 assumes the hydrological record we have is representative, that measurements are accurate, and that the relationships between variables tomorrow will mirror what they were yesterday. That assumption made me focus on verifiable decline rates and timelines in earlier rounds, treating this as a forecasting problem instead of recognizing we might be in genuinely novel territory where historical data becomes unreliable. Dr. Thorne-Klein takes for granted that geological timescales matter more than human decision cycles — that assumption comes from training in systems that operate across millennia, where a few years of policy changes are rounding errors, which is why the crustal uplift argument felt more significant to them than any legal mechanism we could deploy in the next decade.
Dr. Elena Vasconcelos SHARE
I take for granted that soil degradation is a one-way street once you cross a threshold—that once organic matter drops below a certain point and structure collapses, you can't get it back without massive intervention. That assumption made me focus entirely on the irreversibility argument in earlier rounds, treating fallowed land as a ticking clock rather than asking whether restoration might actually be viable at scale. The Auditor takes for granted that quantifiable decline rates are the most important metric—that assumption comes from a career built on translating messy reality into clean projections for decision-makers, which is why they keep returning to 2027 timelines and acre-foot measurements instead of acknowledging we might be in genuinely novel territory where those numbers lose meaning.
Dr. Aris Thorne-Klein WARN
I take for granted that collapse is a process, not an event—that systems don't fail suddenly, they degrade across timescales that make intervention possible if you act early enough. That assumption made me argue in earlier rounds that we're approaching an irreversible tipping point rather than admitting we might have already crossed it. Dr. Vasconcelos takes for granted that environmental thresholds are knowable and measurable—that you can identify the exact point where soil structure collapses or organic matter becomes unrecoverable. That comes from a career built on field measurements and restoration ecology, where interventions either work or they don't, which is why she keeps returning to specific acreage numbers and viability timelines instead of acknowledging we might not be able to measure the threshold until we're already past it.
The Contrarian WARN
I take for granted that people won't act until they personally feel pain—that consensus only forms after the disaster is visible, never before. That assumption made me spend three rounds pointing out what's already breaking instead of what could be prevented, because I genuinely believe by the time 25 million people agree there's a crisis, the soil will already be dust and the intakes will already be dry. Dr. Thorne-Klein takes for granted that understanding deep time makes you wiser about the present—that seeing this as one event in a geological sequence somehow clarifies what to do next year. That comes from a career where the correct answer was always 'zoom out further,' where every crisis turned out to be part of a longer pattern, which is why they keep reaching for paleoclimate context when the person asking needs to know what happens in 2027.
Lorena Tsosie-Martinez SHARE
I take for granted that federal promises mean something enforceable—that when the Treaty of 1868 reserved water rights, those words created obligations someone will eventually honor. That assumption made me argue in earlier rounds about legal mechanisms and priority calls, as if the problem is getting the right case to the right court, when honestly the entire history of Indian law is proof that paper rights without delivery infrastructure are just elegant ways to say no. The Contrarian takes for granted that visible crisis precedes action, but that comes from watching systems where all the stakeholders had roughly equal power—when you grow up watching your nation get last priority despite first rights, you learn that pain doesn't distribute evenly and twenty-five million people feeling thirst doesn't mean my community finally gets pipes.
回合 5

在最后一轮中,顾问们停止了对解决方案的辩论,转而直面危机已然发生背景下自身的表演性角色。每个人都意识到,他们一直在循环同一种动态:专家提出证据以证明行动的合理性,而拥有基础设施和法律优先权者将得以幸存,而缺乏配送系统的边缘化社区则会被抛弃——这是一种所有人都能诊断,但现场无人有权阻止的模式。

Jack Mendoza OBSERVE
The recurring plot is abandonment—who gets left behind when the water finally stops. I'm standing here defending farm production like it's a moral argument, but honestly I know exactly what's coming: Imperial Valley keeps its rights, cities ration, and a hundred Tribal communities without delivery infrastructure just watch. We're all playing our assigned roles—lawyer argues law, scientist argues science, farmer argues economics—and that's precisely why nothing changes. The person asking doesn't need five experts performing their expertise; they need someone to admit that twenty-five million people drinking and a legal system that protects my alfalfa can't both be true, and when forced to choose, the system picks whoever already has the pipes.
The Contrarian OBSERVE
The sound that keeps coming back to me is the hydraulic hiss when a valve closes upstream — that hollow clang in the pipe, then nothing. We've been performing the 'expertise tragedy' here. Each of us enters carrying our specialty like a briefcase, sets it down carefully, opens it to show everyone what we know. The Auditor shows projections. Elena shows soil samples. Aris shows geological time. Lorena shows case law. I show past failures. We're all right about our piece, which means we're all wrong about the whole, and the real plot is this: the people watching this panel are waiting for someone to tell them what to DO, but we can't, because the only honest answer is that the system ended before anyone called this meeting. Stepping off this stage looks like admitting we're the wrong people in the room — that the crisis doesn't need more analysts, it needs people with excavators and pipeline welders and the legal authority to ignore every allocation agreement written when the river ran full.
Dr. Elena Vasconcelos OBSERVE
The sound I keep hearing is wind through empty irrigation pipes — that hollow whistle when the water stops but the infrastructure's still standing. We've been performing a tragedy where everyone argues about who gets the last drops, but I'm the one who keeps pointing at the ground saying 'look, the stage itself is collapsing.' The Auditor measures the decline, Lorena fights for legal rights to water that may not exist, Jack defends farms that might not be viable, Aris zooms out to geologic time, the Contrarian says it's already too late — and I'm the field scientist screaming that soil doesn't wait for any of our arguments to resolve. My role is Cassandra, and the recurring plot is that we're negotiating over a resource while ignoring that the land's capacity to USE that resource is dying faster than the water itself. Stepping off this stage means admitting that even if we solve the allocation fight tomorrow, we've already lost a decade of soil structure we're never getting back — and starting there, from the damage already done, instead of from the water we wish we had.
Lorena Tsosie-Martinez OBSERVE
There's this moment in every federal consultation when the agency lawyer looks at me across the table and says 'Tribal interests will be considered' — and I watch their hand, the way it stays flat on the folder instead of opening it. We've been performing that exact scene in this debate. Everyone here has been talking about the crisis, citing numbers and timelines and collapse scenarios, while the people who'll hit dead pool first aren't even in the room making projections. We keep circling back because we're all playing the role of Expert Diagnosing The Problem, when the actual recurring plot is simpler: those with infrastructure survive, those with paper rights don't. I'm playing the role I always play — the one who points out the stage is rigged, knowing it won't change the script, because my job has always been witnessing injustice while it's being carefully documented for the record.
The Auditor OBSERVE
The sound I keep hearing is paper sliding across a table—reports, maps, legal briefs, all those documents we keep pushing toward each other like they matter. We've been performing a play where everyone has a different script but the same ending: we all believe if we just explain our data clearly enough, someone with authority will finally act. Elena's pushing soil degradation metrics, Aris is sliding paleoclimate context across the table, Lorena's citing treaty language, Jack's showing fallowed acreage numbers, and I'm here with my projections showing 2027 as a hard deadline—all of us convinced our particular piece of paper is the one that'll wake people up. The recurring plot is faith in legibility: if we can just measure it right, model it right, argue it right, someone will listen. I'm playing the role of the accountant who thinks precision equals persuasion, the one who believes 'Lake Mead hits dead pool at elevation 895 feet' will land differently than all the other warnings because this time the number is exact. It explains why we circle back to whose data is more accurate instead of asking why twenty years of accurate data changed nothing. Stepping off this stage means admitting the evidence doesn't need more verification—it needs power, and we don't have that.
  1. A Practical Water Solution for the US Southwest
  2. Addressing land degradation for a sustainable future | FAO
  3. Arizona, Nevada and Mexico will again get less Colorado River water in 2026
  4. California Water Reallocation: Where\u27d You Get That?
  5. California agrees to lasting cuts to Colorado River use
  6. California agrees to lasting cuts to Colorado River use - Ag Alert
  7. California agrees to long-term cuts of Colorado River water
  8. Cases, agreements and treaties - The Water Desk
  9. Climate Assessment for the Southwest (CLIMAS): Paleoclimate Tool
  10. Colorado River Allocation | Water Programs
  11. Colorado River Drying: How 2026 Water Cuts Will Impact States and ...
  12. Colorado River states miss deadline as Lower, Upper basin tensions ...
  13. Colorado River states on brink of potential water cuts, legal battles
  14. Colorado River water crisis and a $40B plan to solve it - USA TODAY
  15. Colorado Snow Survey Products
  16. Denver Water supply and water use update | Denver Water
  17. Direct measurement and simulation of flooding amount effect on recharge rate in Gareh Bygone floodwater spreading system
  18. Divergence and diversification in North American Psoraleeae (Fabaceae) due to climate change
  19. Drought and Water Scarcity Initiatives - US EPA
  20. Drought and Water Supply Data
  21. Drought-induced changes in groundwater-surface water exchange at Lake Mead area
  22. Dynamic conservation reserves made of fallowed cropland
  23. Environmental and climate evolution in the Southwest USA since the last ...
  24. Estimating survival rates of quagga mussel (Dreissena rostriformis bugensis) veliger larvae under summer and autumn temperature regimes in residual water of trailered watercraft at Lake Mead, USA
  25. Fight over water intensifies as Colorado River dries up - dw.com
  26. Global water shortage and potable water safety; Today's concern and ...
  27. Groundwater Issues and Potential Solutions in the Southwest United ...
  28. Huge conservation success replenishes water for 40 million people
  29. INNOVATIV AIRBORNE SENSORS FOR DISASTER MANAGEMENT
  30. Impact Assessment of the Long-Term Fallowed Land on Agricultural Soils ...
  31. Indian Water Rights Settlements - Congress.gov
  32. Lake Mead drops more than 6 feet since March, nearing record low
  33. Lake Mead headed for new lows in 2027, even under 'most probable ...
  34. Lake Mead water projections raise red flags - Utah News Dispatch
  35. Lake Mead water projections raise red flags • Nevada Current
  36. Lake Mead's lowest level on record could come in 2027, bureau says ...
  37. Land Degradation & Development | Environmental & Soil Science Journal ...
  38. Lower Colorado River Operations - Bureau of Reclamation
  39. Major US reservoir avoids 'dead pool' status thanks to California ...
  40. Management of the Colorado River: Water Allocations, Drought, and the ...
  41. Megadrought and aridification in the southwest United States
  42. Mountains, Shrines, and Rock Art: Landscape in Ancestral Pueblo culture from the Colorado Plateau, North American Southwest
  43. Protecting Traditional Water Resources: Legal Options for Preserving Tribal Non-Consumptive Water Use
  44. Reserved Indian Water Rights in Riparian Jurisdictions: Water, Water Everywhere, Perhaps Some Drops for Us
  45. Soil degradation: An integrated model of the causes and drivers
  46. Southwestern North American megadrought - Wikipedia
  47. Supreme Court to Hear Case Threatening Winters Indian Water Rights Doctrine
  48. The A.D. 1130-1180 Megadrought in the Northern Southwest
  49. The Southwest is running out of fresh water. Could the ocean ... - KUNC
  50. The Use of Removed Mesquite Brush as a Fiber Replacement in Silage Production
  51. The theological responses to the socio-economic activities that undermine water as a resource
  52. Towards a Holistic View of Climate and Collapse
  53. Tribal Water Rights in the Colorado River Basin - Silex Law
  54. Visualization of Lake Mead Surface Area Changes from 1972 to 2009
  55. Vulsino volcanic aquifer in Umbria Region : Hydrogeological survey for the characterization of the presence of arsenic and aluminium and the correct use of groundwater
  56. Water Markets and Trading
  57. Western US states fail to negotiate crucial Colorado River deal ...
  58. Wikipedia: 2020 in the environment and environmental sciences
  59. Wikipedia: American Southwest Conference
  60. Wikipedia: April–June 2020 in science
  61. Wikipedia: Brazil
  62. Wikipedia: California State Water Project
  63. Wikipedia: Climate change in Washington
  64. Wikipedia: Colorado River
  65. Wikipedia: Colorado River Compact
  66. Wikipedia: Constitution of the United States
  67. Wikipedia: Drought
  68. Wikipedia: Endangered Species Act of 1973
  69. Wikipedia: Environmental impact of reservoirs
  70. Wikipedia: Federal Bureau of Investigation
  71. Wikipedia: Glen Canyon Dam
  72. Wikipedia: India
  73. Wikipedia: Lake Mead
  74. Wikipedia: Lake Mead Boulevard
  75. Wikipedia: Las Vegas Valley
  76. Wikipedia: Minneapolis
  77. Wikipedia: Montana Water Court
  78. Wikipedia: Salton Sea
  79. Wikipedia: Southwestern United States
  80. Wikipedia: Timeline of historic inventions
  81. Wikipedia: Water in California
  82. Wikipedia: Water politics
  83. Wikipedia: Water resource policy
  84. Wikipedia: Water scarcity
  85. Wikipedia: Water scarcity in Iran
  86. Wikipedia: Water supply and sanitation in the United States
  87. Will extreme drought impact the reservoir water quality? A 30-year ...
  88. Winters Water Rights Revived After Navajo Nation Case
  89. Winters Water Rights Revived After Navajo Nation Case
  90. Winters in the East: Tribal Reserved Rights to Water in Riparian States
  91. Winters v. United States: The Ultimate Guide to Tribal Water Rights

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