Wouldn't it be wise to make Lake Hefner deeper? Part of the reason it tends to try up is not only its size but its shallowness. Many parts of it are very shallow so the sun reflects off the lake bottom and increases evaporation.
Wouldn't it be wise to make Lake Hefner deeper? Part of the reason it tends to try up is not only its size but its shallowness. Many parts of it are very shallow so the sun reflects off the lake bottom and increases evaporation.
The Panhandle already is classified as semi-arid desert with less than 20" of precipitation annually. Parts of Western Oklahoma are close. If you've been to the Wichita Mtns or to Lake Altus it looks like a desert landscape with brush and cactus and few large trees. The continuous drought has made things worse for farming/ranching and I imagine there is plenty of once-productive land that is now useless which is an example of desertification, most likely in the far southwest which has been in an exceptional drought for several years.
Pipeline from San Diego County may be the solution to meet future needs...
Carlsbad Desalination Project | Home
It would have to be pretty far in the future before Oklahoma is using desalinization, it generally costs more than any of the other methods, uses a lot of power to run and we are not super close to an ocean. Though who knows, maybe several decades from now there will be a national system of pipelines for water similar to fuel, crude and natural gas today.
I asked a friend (who had connections and responsibilities to be in the know) about this once and he (very politely) laughed my idea into oblivion due to cost. All the same, here it is.
We're worried about global warming (with concurrent rising oceans) AND low aquifer levels. I think desalinization plants that feed into central aquifers is the way to go.
but I don't want to pay for it, personally
Agreed. Although, it solar is still in its infancy, imo, and needs to be researched further to produce more energy.
Wow
Haven't really checked lately, although, I'm sure they're doing great after this rain.
Hardly any improvement at Canton Lake. It went from 21% full to 22% full.
CNLO2 : Canton Lake
Current Readings:
- Pool elevation is 1602.74 feet on Thursday 29May14 Time: 1100 hours.
- At this elevation the total amount of water stored in Canton Lake is 35477 acre-feet.
- Reservoir release is 0 cubic feet per second on Thursday 29May14 Time: 1100 hours.
- Conservation pool is 22.52% full.
- Conservation storage filled is 21580 acre-feet which is equivalent to 0.05 inches of runoff over the entire drainage basin.
- Conservation storage empty is 74265 acre-feet which is equivalent to 0.18 inches of runoff over the entire drainage basin.
Nice line of storms firing up around Woodward and look to be training which is what this area needs to get water into Canton!
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Does canton get much runoff? That area has been getting a fair amount of rain and it's still sitting at 22%. At least Hefner is almost back to full.
A wu reporting station by Canton Lake has 6.71" of rain for June.
Question for drought experts: last year OKC had one of its rainiest years on record, approximately 50 inches of rain. This year we are at about 16 inches so far, a little less than half of our average annual total. But when I look at the drought monitor it shows Oklahoma County in the "Extreme" drought category. Why? This makes no sense to me at all.
I'm by no means a drought expert, but it doesn't just deal with how much rain falls but rather where, how fast, etc. If the ground is hard from drought and too much rain falls too quickly, much of it will leave the area as runoff and will hardly benefit the soil conditions. Permeability and vegetation type play a huge role. I believe the best "drought buster" to be moderate amounts of rain over a prolonged period of time. Plus keep in mind that even though it has been raining a lot recently, we are still having the 12th driest year (year-to-date) here in Central OK having only received 63% of our normal rainfall.
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