Views : 2,673,742
Genre: Education
Date of upload: Jul 19, 2022 ^^
Rating : 4.916 (1,468/68,211 LTDR)
RYD date created : 2024-05-07T00:57:43.70875Z
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Top Comments of this video!! :3
I did a motorcycle trip through the S/W in June '22. I saw reservoirs 40% down immediately after the spring melt. Farmers were irrigating during the heat of the day, because that is when they were scheduled to draw, using high volume, high position sprinklers that have much more evaporation rate than the more expensive low volume, low elevation sprinklers. Grass lawns were irrigated everywhere in a climate that is naturally semi-arid scrub land. There was new house construction near dry-as-a-bone Sacramento when the water supply is obviously failing.
Much could be done in a very short time.
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This is why the massive exodus to the deserts of the Southwest can't continue indefinitely. The Sinagua and Hohokam people abandoned many settlements throughout the Southwest long before Europans arrived, and I think unsustainable droughts were a major factor in what happened. They left a lot of canals that we still use today, so it's clear they were dealing with a water scarcity of their own. It seems we're still making the same mistakes today.
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A couple of years ago Cape Town faced âDay Zeroâ when all the water supplying dams would run dry.
It was a close run thing where emergency measures were enacted to allow citizens to fetch water from designated municipal/government sites.
An extended period of water saving measures avoided having our taps run dry. Itâs easier to survive without electricity (also a problem in SA) than without water! Fortunately rains since then have been good (enough).
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I appreciate your positive outlook on low reservoir levels, and that it isnât always a bad thing. I was in a meeting with USBR back in June and learned that the concern they were looking at, at the time, was the water being below the intakes for the pumps to actually use the water. I donât remember exactly but I think it was below the pump intakes the time, would have to look it up to be sure. Theyâre exact words were âweâre looking into it but donât worry weâre not at the point of considering blasting the dam yet.â Hearing this conversation really brought the severity of Lake Meadâs level to prospective for me.
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Surface reservoirs being depleted are only the start of the reservoir issues we are about to have to deal with.
Underground reservoirs that make up 95% of liquid fresh water and the bulk of the water we use are being emptied at an unsustainable rate. They take a long time to recharge and once they empty can become permanently closed due to the soil compressing over them.
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So the question of the video title was never quite answered--only many of the factors of a reservoir going dry were mentioned. But what does actually happen with the turbines and turbine-related generation systems? What happens to water distribution networks downstream? Do they tend to silt over as flow rates drop well below normal? Do the metal parts and pipes tend to oxidize at a greater rate when no longer submerged? What are the alternatives when the reservoir is massive with high levels of dependency in many communities and in agricultural production? And do we have any example of it happening anywhere near the scale of the subject reservoirs here?
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I am a retired Science teacher. Your video sets an example for others here on YouTube to learn from... no lies, no exaggerations, no use of 'attention getting' techniques (read: 'BS'). Instead, you present good quality Science in a friendly, easy to follow and straightforward way. Wonderful!! đđ
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A lack of water is not normally dangerous for a dam. However... a lack of water in your water pipes can be very severe, even if just for a day. If there isn't constant water and it's pressure in the pipes you'll find the built of mineral layers on the walls can crumble and break off. And with so many pipes being lead (especially in the US where instead of doing expensive projects to replace the pipes early we just raised the allowed lead levels up well beyond the safe point and decided we were now hitting our metrics even as things were) you'll be in serious trouble if this happens in these places. Sudden major changes in the chemical make up of your water can lead to mass poisoning from the water supply. Of lead poisoning and otherwise. If water ever fails in your neighborhood, it's a very good idea to get some lead tests and have a few people around the neighborhood test their water while running it for a bit once it's back. Some utilities would do this themselves... others... don't always....
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@bill_and_amanda
1 year ago
one point i think maybe this video could have hit a little harder was that reservoirs are sized based on the demand predicted by planners when the reservoir was built. However, the meteoric growth of a lot of areas of the southwest in the last 40-50 years was, to an extent, unforeseen. So not only do you have less water coming in than normal, you have more water going out than expected, exacerbating the problem.
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