Concerns About New Colorado River Study

From today’s newspaper, my story (sub/ad req) about a Senate hearing earlier this week that touched on a study of water supply and demand now getting underway in the Colorado River Basin. The story’s brief, but the hearing raised what I think is a very interesting question: While individual states have looked at their own …

Continue reading ‘Concerns About New Colorado River Study’ »

On the Darwinian Nature of Bunk

The existence of bunk when science lumbers into the political sphere with what to some are uncomfortable observations seems to be a remarkably resilient feature of our landscape. I learned this more than a decade ago when I spent a good deal of time reading the work of quasi-scientific young-earth creationists. The arguments raised by …

Continue reading ‘On the Darwinian Nature of Bunk’ »

Drought, Dams and Border Tension

As drought grips the Lancang-Mekong basin in Asia, tensions are growing over China’s dam, according to Richard Stone, writing in Friday’s Science (sub req): The drought’s effects have spilled across China’s borders, stoking tensions with neighbors and prompting scientific debate. Rice yields in Thailand are expected to take a big hit, and the Mekong River—the …

Continue reading ‘Drought, Dams and Border Tension’ »

How Low Can Mead Go? Let’s Talk Come June

It’s looking increasingly likely that we’ll see history this summer, of the dry, unpleasant sort, on Lake Mead. With a meager snowpack in the Upper Green and Upper Colorado, the chances of a water surplus in the Upper Colorado River Basin that would allow an extra dollop of the wet stuff for Lake Mead have …

Continue reading ‘How Low Can Mead Go? Let’s Talk Come June’ »