A Once-Great River Rises on the Colorado Plateau
The Upper Colorado River Basin -
By the time the Colorado River  passes Moab, Utah, it  already carries a heavy load of minerals, trash and  sewage. By mid-summer, water levels drop, exposing driftwood, sewage and trash  along the shore. Only the next  spring flood
 will loosen these stinking mixtures of organic material and  plastic 
from the shoreline. In 2014, when I saw methane bubbles rising from one 
 such stinking mass, it opened my eyes wide to the damage already done 
to this once great river.
A Place Called Potash, Utah -
After skirting the Matheson  Wetlands along one bank and the Moab Pile on the other, the Colorado River  descends through the Portal and on to a place called Potash, Utah. To make  potash sound more interesting, the owners of the  Cane Creek Potash Plant
 named themselves "Intrepid" Potash-Moab, LLC. Using  dubious and 
undocumented Colorado River water rights, Intrepid Potash-Moab  infuses 
millions of gallons of river water annually into the Cane Creek  
Anticline.
After injection, the anticline collapses ever so slightly. This 
subsidence burps  out untold acre-feet of a brine solution, which is 
rich in potash salts. After drying and processing,  Intrepid-Moab ships 
the resulting product out via rail and  interstate highway. Later, agents and retailers resell the packaged product  to farmers and  home gardeners.
 The success of the corporate farming, as we know it today  depends on 
finished potash and other synthetic fertilizers for its success.
Intrepid-Moab
 uses solar power to dry its potash brine in shallow, lined ponds.  
These ponds cover many colorful acres of bench land overlooking the 
Colorado  River. From the Potash Road, four-wheelers access the Shafer Trail
 by  traversing through the Cane Creek Plant. If terrestrial scenes of 
chemical  degradation and poor stewardship of the land are not enough 
for you, I suggest  an air tour of the area. On a Redtail Aviation flight  out of Moab’s Canyonlands  Field several years ago, our pilot banked the plane sufficiently for me to  capture some revealing photos of the Cane Creek Plant.
Gushing from injection well sites that are high up on the bench land, 
the  upwelling brine cascades unchecked until it reaches the settling 
ponds below.  Any miscalculation of volume could result in overflow of 
the settling ponds.  From the air, you can see a white crust that has 
dried upon the walls of small  canyons leading down to the Colorado 
River. This tells me that Intrepid  Potash-Moab has experienced both 
overflow and leakage at the settling ponds.  Dwarfing
 any inputs upstream in Utah and Colorado, Intrepid Potash-Moab could be
  the largest contributor of organic solids anywhere in the Upper 
Colorado River  Basin. After potash spills into the river, it goes back 
into solution, adding to  the salinity of the water and turning the 
river into an  organic time bomb.
Mudflats and Methane Volcanoes -
After its confluence with the  Green River,
 the first full stop for the Colorado  River is at the upper reaches of 
Lake Powell in Southeastern Utah. Soon after  the lake reached its full 
potential size in the early 1980s, its water level  began to fluctuate 
and then decline. During the past fourteen years of  persistent drought,
 Lake Powell lost nearly half of its peak volume. Today,  optimists 
might say that Lake Powell is “half full”. Almost unanimously, climate  
scientists agree that the reservoir is “half empty” and will continue to
  decline.
 With many miles of former lakebed exposed to sunlight at the upper end of Lake  Powell, the environment on those mudflats
 has deteriorated significantly. As  water laden with heavy metals and 
organic material arrives at the upper end of  the lake, it mixes with 
silt and sand. The result is a phenomenon known as methane volcanoes.
 Methane gas can be a byproduct of flatulence in cattle, coal  mining or
 the baking of organic mud. Most people are familiar with carbon  
dioxide as our most ubiquitous “greenhouse gas”. Fewer people might know
 that methane  is fifteen times more powerful as a  greenhouse gas
 than carbon dioxide. Carbon  dioxide puts the effervescent fizz in our 
soft drinks. Methane smells bad, is  flammable and if contained, may 
explode.
With many miles of former lakebed exposed to sunlight at the upper end of Lake  Powell, the environment on those mudflats
 has deteriorated significantly. As  water laden with heavy metals and 
organic material arrives at the upper end of  the lake, it mixes with 
silt and sand. The result is a phenomenon known as methane volcanoes.
 Methane gas can be a byproduct of flatulence in cattle, coal  mining or
 the baking of organic mud. Most people are familiar with carbon  
dioxide as our most ubiquitous “greenhouse gas”. Fewer people might know
 that methane  is fifteen times more powerful as a  greenhouse gas
 than carbon dioxide. Carbon  dioxide puts the effervescent fizz in our 
soft drinks. Methane smells bad, is  flammable and if contained, may 
explode.
The Navajo Reservation is Coal Country -
First,
 the stinking, organic mudflats at the upper end of Lake Powell create 
and  release untold amounts of methane gas. Usually, warm air and light 
gases like  methane rise from the surface and dissipate in the upper 
atmosphere. Often methane from Lake  Powell remains in the lower 
atmosphere, trapped near the ground by an  atmospheric inversion layer.
 If an atmospheric inversion is present, warm air  aloft traps hot and 
volatile gasses below, thus creating a bubble of noxious air  at or near
 ground level.
Not ironically, a huge  methane gas bubble now floats above the  Four Corners  region. Is this unprecedented bubble of volatile gas the result of  Navajo Nation coal mining,  cattle flatulence
 or the stinking mudflats and methane volcanoes at the upper  reaches of
 Lake Powell? Personally, I am betting on a combination of coal mining  
and fertilized mudflats. Thank you for your fertile potash input, 
Intrepid Potash-Moab,  LLC.
Glen Canyon Damned -
 After
 flowing over and sifting through the mudflats, the Colorado River 
enters  many miles of forced confinement between sandstone canyon walls.
 There it drops  its remaining sediment to the bottom of what once was a
 desert garden of  legendary beauty. Known as Glen Canyon,
 living humans who saw it in its  untrammeled glory are now few and 
elderly. Only through old black and white  photographs and essays by 
such writers as  John Wesley Powell and Edward Abbey do  we know about a place once visited only by dory boat or river raft.
After
 flowing over and sifting through the mudflats, the Colorado River 
enters  many miles of forced confinement between sandstone canyon walls.
 There it drops  its remaining sediment to the bottom of what once was a
 desert garden of  legendary beauty. Known as Glen Canyon,
 living humans who saw it in its  untrammeled glory are now few and 
elderly. Only through old black and white  photographs and essays by 
such writers as  John Wesley Powell and Edward Abbey do  we know about a place once visited only by dory boat or river raft.
Once the water in Lake Powell reaches the penstocks and electrical 
turbines at  Glen Canyon Dam, it is cold, dark and nearly devoid of 
oxygen. The portion of lake  water that rests below the deepest intake 
on the dam, we call the “dead  pool”. The lake water in the dead pool is
 as near to dead as fresh water can .jpg) be.
  Once released downstream, dam water is clear, cold and capable of 
supporting no  life higher than green fronded algae. Such algae grow 
wherever the water flow is  slow enough to support life. If Colorado 
means, “colored red” or “Red River”,  immediately below Glen Canyon Dam,
 that name does not apply. Running clear, cold and fringed  with green 
algae, its name should revert to “Green River”.
be.
  Once released downstream, dam water is clear, cold and capable of 
supporting no  life higher than green fronded algae. Such algae grow 
wherever the water flow is  slow enough to support life. If Colorado 
means, “colored red” or “Red River”,  immediately below Glen Canyon Dam,
 that name does not apply. Running clear, cold and fringed  with green 
algae, its name should revert to “Green River”.
This is Part 1 of a three-part article. To read Part 2, please click  HERE.
   
By James McGillis at 02:56 PM | Colorado River | Comments (0) | Link

 
 
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