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talk / talk.environment / Giant Lake Returns 130 Years After Vanishing

SubjectAuthor
o Giant Lake Returns 130 Years After VanishingP. Coonan

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Subject: Giant Lake Returns 130 Years After Vanishing
From: P. Coonan
Newsgroups: alt.talk.weather, sci.geo.rivers+lakes, ca.water, talk.environment, talk.politics.guns, sac.politics
Organization: Specious Propaganda Law Center
Date: Mon, 6 May 2024 04:55 UTC
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: nospam@ix.netcom.com (P. Coonan)
Newsgroups: alt.talk.weather,sci.geo.rivers+lakes,ca.water,talk.environment,talk.politics.guns,sac.politics
Subject: Giant Lake Returns 130 Years After Vanishing
Date: Mon, 6 May 2024 04:55:30 -0000 (UTC)
Organization: Specious Propaganda Law Center
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Tulare Lake, located in California�s San Joaquin Valley, was once one of
the largest bodies of fresh water in the entire United States. But about
130 years ago, it disappeared � largely due to the greed of colonialists,
who drained the water to create farmland.

In the late 19th century, Tulare was more than 100 miles long and 30 miles
wide and was �the largest body of fresh water west of the Mississippi
River,� Vivian Underhill of Northeastern University explained in a press
release.

At that time, it contained so much water that a steamship could transport
�agricultural supplies from the Bakersfield area to Fresno (in the central
San Joaquin Valley) and then to San Francisco� � The distance is almost
300 miles � she said.

According to the National Weather Service, Fresno receives an average of a
little more than 10 inches of rain per year, and sometimes as little as
three inches. Looking at the arid landscape of the San Joaquin Valley in
the 21st century, it is difficult to imagine that such a large body of
water would dominate the landscape.

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Rivers

The researcher specializing in ethnology and environmental justice
explains that the lake began to disappear in the late 1850s and early
1860s, due to �the State of California�s desire to appropriate historic
indigenous lands and bring them into the private sector.

��She explains that the process is called �reclamation� and often involves
��draining wetlands or irrigating desert land to create farmland.�

The first time the lake completely disappeared was around 1890, when ��its
waters were used to irrigate all the dry land around that area,� she
continued. �California gets a lot of snow in the winter and rain in the
spring,� Underhill said.

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�Birds of all kinds � pelicans, hawks, waterfowl� are returning, said
Underhill, adding that �the Tachi people also say they have seen burrowing
owls nesting around the coast,� a species described as �vulnerable or at
risk.�

For Tachi Yokuts, �returning from the lake was an incredibly powerful and
spiritual experience,� Underhill said. Many of these agricultural workers
suffered heavy losses due to the floods, with many losing their homes
completely.

Efforts are already underway to drain the lake again, and Underhill said
she hopes it will remain in some form for about two more years � despite
recent river atmospheric events occurring in California this year could
complicate things.

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Under Frozen River While Rescuing Dog

�Amid climate change,� Underhill said, �floods of this magnitude or
greater will occur with increasing frequency. �At some point, I think the
State of California needs to realize that Tulare Lake wants to stay.�

She also pointed out that last year`s revival was not the lake�s first
revival since the 1800s. �It happened in the 80s, once in the 60s, several
times in the 1930s,� she said. �It wasn�t a flood.

Less than a year after its resurgence, Tulare Lake�s surface area has
dropped to just 2,625 acres, according to the Kings County Office of
Emergency Services. And authorities are now expecting his �imminent
disappearance,� Abraham Valencia of the emergency services office told
reporters.

https://gistfest.com/giant-lake-returns-130-years-after-vanishing/

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