Hey, what's that Sound? Is it the "Perfect Flood"?
On June 22, 2009, the first full day of summer, we drove the Potash Road (Utah Route 279), beginning at its junction with U.S. Highway 191 North, near Moab, Utah. A paved highway, Potash Road parallels Kane Creek Access Road, on the opposite bank of the Colorado River. Both roads meander downstream from Moab and the Spanish Valley.
Watch the Action - The Potash Road Moab, Utah 2009
On the west bank, Potash Road skirts the Moab Pile, which occupies most of
The Matheson Wetlands
 occupy a floodplain along the inside radius of this unique Colorado 
River bend. Its uniqueness as a riparian environment stems from the lack
 of canyon walls on either side of the bend. From the east, Spanish 
Valley descends gradually, until it meets the wetlands within the 
ancient flood plain. Despite a setback  from
 the fire, The Nature Conservancy's ecologists are midway through a plan
 to bring back a natural flow of water throughout the Matheson Wetlands.
from
 the fire, The Nature Conservancy's ecologists are midway through a plan
 to bring back a natural flow of water throughout the Matheson Wetlands. 
Water use planning in the Four Corner states, Nevada
 and Southern California depends on the stability and ultimate removal 
of the radioactive landfill, known as the Moab Pile.
 The fragile position of the Moab Pile is what most concerns downstream 
water planners in Phoenix, Las Vegas and Los Angeles. They know that documented paleofloods
 of enormous size periodically scour the flood plain of the Colorado in 
that location. At least two megafloods occurred in the past several 
thousand years. In such a flood, the broken megaliths that line the 
canyon upstream of the  pile
 could be set loose, battering the vulnerable pile and washing it into 
the Colorado River channel. If it happened that recently, it could 
happen again.
pile
 could be set loose, battering the vulnerable pile and washing it into 
the Colorado River channel. If it happened that recently, it could 
happen again.
In a “Perfect Flood” scenario, there would be heavy snowfall during a cold winter in the Colorado Plateau watershed. With an entire winter’s snowpack still in place, dust storms
 of enormous size could arise from the over-grazed Navajo Indian 
Reservation, to the South. Contemporary dust storms create weather 
vortices that are orders of magnitude larger than the largest 
firestorms. As the storms move across Southeastern Utah, land long 
overgrazed by ranchers and more recently overrun by off-road vehicles 
ads to  the problem. If a series of such storms carried sufficient airborne soil, followed by rain, a blanket of dust could melt the Colorado Plateau snowpack
 in short order. At its peak, the subsequent flood could engulf the Moab
 Pile and wash its toxic and radioactive material downstream towards 
Lake Powell.
the problem. If a series of such storms carried sufficient airborne soil, followed by rain, a blanket of dust could melt the Colorado Plateau snowpack
 in short order. At its peak, the subsequent flood could engulf the Moab
 Pile and wash its toxic and radioactive material downstream towards 
Lake Powell.
Currently, there is an active effort to relocate the Moab Pile to the new Moab Mountain, location at Crescent Junction, Utah. According to current Department of Energy (DOE) estimates,
 the removal project will take until 2022-2025. Depending on materials 
and conditions found in the core of the pile, those estimates are 
subject to change. As of this writing, the most  optimistic
 estimates are for a thirteen-year project. Meanwhile, engineers and 
planners have done little to protect the pile from the potential of a 
Perfect Flood, as described above. The only observable difference at the
 site is the widening of a dry watercourse adjacent to the upstream side
 of the pile. The widening and deepening of that arroyo is all that 
stands between the river and the safety of the Lower Colorado Basin water supply and its seventeen million users.
optimistic
 estimates are for a thirteen-year project. Meanwhile, engineers and 
planners have done little to protect the pile from the potential of a 
Perfect Flood, as described above. The only observable difference at the
 site is the widening of a dry watercourse adjacent to the upstream side
 of the pile. The widening and deepening of that arroyo is all that 
stands between the river and the safety of the Lower Colorado Basin water supply and its seventeen million users.
 optimistic
 estimates are for a thirteen-year project. Meanwhile, engineers and 
planners have done little to protect the pile from the potential of a 
Perfect Flood, as described above. The only observable difference at the
 site is the widening of a dry watercourse adjacent to the upstream side
 of the pile. The widening and deepening of that arroyo is all that 
stands between the river and the safety of the Lower Colorado Basin water supply and its seventeen million users.
optimistic
 estimates are for a thirteen-year project. Meanwhile, engineers and 
planners have done little to protect the pile from the potential of a 
Perfect Flood, as described above. The only observable difference at the
 site is the widening of a dry watercourse adjacent to the upstream side
 of the pile. The widening and deepening of that arroyo is all that 
stands between the river and the safety of the Lower Colorado Basin water supply and its seventeen million users.If a Perfect Flood were to hit the pile before its 
complete removal, life in the West would never be the same. Communities 
and individuals whose water sources are upstream of the pile  would be safe. Those living downstream of the potential washout could find Colorado River water unfit for home, industrial
 or agricultural consumption. If our water supply experienced a dramatic
 spike in chemicals, heavy metals and radioactive waste, we would 
immediately seek a different water source.
would be safe. Those living downstream of the potential washout could find Colorado River water unfit for home, industrial
 or agricultural consumption. If our water supply experienced a dramatic
 spike in chemicals, heavy metals and radioactive waste, we would 
immediately seek a different water source. 
If seventeen million residents had to find new water
 supplies or perish, the Southwestern U.S. would face depopulation far 
greater than the Anasazi Disappearance, around 1200 CE. Financially, the Perfect Flood would make the estimated $150 billion cost of Hurricane Katrina look diminutive, by comparison. From Moab, Utah, to its dry and neglected delta, at the Sea of Cortez, Mexico, the Colorado River would become a river of death.
By James McGillis at 11:45 AM | | Comments (0) | Link

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