SmallIsPower Posted July 11, 2006 Posted July 11, 2006 Global warming is taking its toll, altering weather patterns. Africa is not the only place drying up, American cities are running out. If the town of Los Vegas, New Mexico {pop 18,000}doesn't get normal rainfall, it could dry up in a few months.
herpguy Posted July 11, 2006 Posted July 11, 2006 ...and people think we shouldn't take action of any sort on climate change.
SmallIsPower Posted July 12, 2006 Author Posted July 12, 2006 Here's the drought map for the US. For comparison, look at the archive for previous years. I'll admit it isn't scientific, but the first few years {that the archive was in existance} the US was alot wetter.
herpguy Posted July 12, 2006 Posted July 12, 2006 Here's the drought map for the US[/url']. For comparison, look at the archive for previous years. I'll admit it isn't scientific, but the first few years {that the archive was in existance} the US was alot wetter. I didn't look at every map, but I did notice that between 1999 and 2003-ish the drought area just kept expanding rapidly, and it became more intense. Ouch.
ecoli Posted July 12, 2006 Posted July 12, 2006 Much of the problem is being caused by uninformed irrigation. Farms and industry are sucking water out of Rivers (Especially the Columbia) faster then the river can flow. I have heard that the Columbia river no longer empties into the bay of California anymore. (Which is also creating problems with the water salinity of the region)
silkworm Posted July 13, 2006 Posted July 13, 2006 I've been checking this out for a few years now, and it's been scaring the Hell out of me as well. There are major drought issues out west, and western Kansas has had a serious trend of turning into a desert.
GrandMasterK Posted July 13, 2006 Posted July 13, 2006 This is the worst storm season we've had in a decade, so whats happening then, the water is just drying up faster on the hot days?
SmallIsPower Posted July 13, 2006 Author Posted July 13, 2006 I'm sure with all the category 4 & 5, and 27 tropical strorms, and hurricanes, it's the worst on record. Global warrming is going to create stronger winds and storms, and probably drop more rain at a time in a spot, so there's less elsewhere. Anybody familiar with Pacific Decadanal Oscillations? Apparently they have something to do with rain.
ecoli Posted July 13, 2006 Posted July 13, 2006 This is the worst storm season we've had in a decade, so whats happening then, the water is just drying up faster on the hot days? Keeping in mind the location and types of storms in important, though. The american southwest doesn't often get tropical storms, which are the wet ones. Dust storms are a lot more likely.
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