雅思阅读:Runaway Devils Lake
Devils Lake is where I began my career as a limnologist in 1964, studying the lakes neotenic salamanders and chironomids, or midge flies. Back then, the lake covered about 80 square kilometers, had a maximum depth of about 3 meters and held about 130,000 acre-feet of water. The lake has since risen 13 meters, from a surface elevation of 430 meters above mean sea level to 443 meters. Estimated lake volume is now 4.1 million acre-feet, or about 32 times greater than it was in 1964, and about 370 times greater than it was in 1940 when the lake stood at a record low elevation of 427 meters.
The Devils Lake Basin is an endorheic, or closed, basin covering about 9,800 square kilometers in northeastern North Dakota. The basin is at the epicenter of an unprecedented wet period in the lakes modern-day history going back to 1867, when the lakes surface elevation was first measured. Basin climate has become substantially wetter since 1990, with the years 1990 through 2009 ranking as the wettest 20-year period in more than a century. The National Weather Service has referred to this trend as the new climate for the Devils Lake region, cautiously predicting that the current weather pattern may continue for several decades and possibly intensify. Indeed, the agency has warned that the region faces the strong possibility of an unprecedented fourth consecutive major spring flood threat in 2012.
Rising lake waters have flooded much of the region, engulfing hundreds of homes and farmsteads, more than 650 square kilometers of productive farmland, major highways and bridges, state parks, Native American tribal lands, historical landmarks and more than half a million trees. Submerged too is the North Dakota Biological Station, a two-story limnological facility established in 1909 to study the lakes unusual ecology and biogeochemistry. Portions of U.S. Highway 281 are now underwater, which has forced the relocation of this principal north-south highway several kilometers to the west. Other roads and highways are either extremely hazardous or simply impassable because of encroaching floodwaters. Amtrak and the BNSF Railway may have to reroute their trains over more southern lines as rising waters threaten to wash out roadbeds and bridges. The small town of Minnewaukan, once located 13 kilometers west of the lake, is now partly underwater, and many of its 300-plus residents have been forced to abandon their homes. Only a handful of people remain in Churchs Ferry and nearby Penn, communities established more than a century ago. The city of Devils Lake, North Dakotas eleventh largest city with about 7,000 residents, sits behind a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers levee that protects the community from storm-generated waves that reportedly reach 2 meters or more in height. Without the levee, 3 to 4 meters of water would now cover parts of the city. To date, efforts by federal, state and local governments to control flooding and protect communities exceed $1 billion, a cost that is rising as fatefully as lake waters.
Ancient Lake Minnewaukan
Devils Lake owes its existence to a continental glacier that covered much of North America during the Pleistocene Epoch. Carving a basin as it advanced over the landscape, the glacier deposited excavated materials along its leading edges, leaving terminal moraines marking the farthest extent of glacial ice sheets. Near the end of the Pleistocene, roughly 11,000 years ago, the glacier began its retreat. As the glacier withdrew, glacial meltwaters poured into the basin, creating a vast proglacial lake dammed by morainal deposits. Native Americans called this lake Minnewaukan, meaning, among other possible interpretations, Bad Spirit Water. Recent flooding has perhaps given credence to a legend told by those Native Americans, claiming that the lake once overflowed and flooded the entire world.
Based on abandoned beaches, or strand lines, geologists estimate that the ancestral lake reached a maximum surface elevation of between 444 and 445 meters. At that elevation, the lake covered about 1,050 square kilometers, held about 5 million acre-feet of water and had a maximum depth of around 50 meters. A natural outlet called Tolna Coulee, which allowed water to flow out of the basin and prevented the lake from rising and expanding further, controlled the maximum elevation. How often the lake has overflowed is uncertain, but geologists believe it has happened at least twice over the past 4,000 years, most recently around 2,000 years ago.
During the centuries that followed the lakes origin, climate shifts caused water levels to fluctuate between 6 and 12 meters every few hundred years. Sediment analyses by geologist Edward Callender, published in his 1968 University of North Dakota doctoral thesis, indicated that the lake might have been completely dry 6,500 years ago. After the lake last rose to its maximum elevation and began overflowing, water levels continued to fluctuate in response to alternating dry and wet periods. A persistently dry climate 500 to 600 years ago held levels at relatively low elevations for perhaps as long as 200 years. Wetter conditions followed, raising the lake to levels that prevailed until the late 1800s. Levels then began dropping precipitously, falling to the lowest-recorded elevation by 1940 before rising again.
Whether Lake Minnewaukan was completely dry at times or not, periodic drawdowns during dry conditions reduced its immense volume to numerous remnant lakes scattered across the south-central region of the basin. Nonindigenous people who settled the region beginning in the mid-1800s named the largest and most prominent of these remnants Devils Lake, perhaps because of the lakes highly saline, undrinkable water, or perhaps in tribute to Sioux warriors whose canoes were often capsized in the lakes treacherous, storm-tossed waters.
In 1964, Devils Lake consisted of three principal basins called West Bay, Main Bay and East Bay. West Bay then was essentially dry and Main Bay covered about 53 square kilometers. The Rock Island State Military Reservation separated East Baywhich covered about 27 square kilometersfrom Main Bay. According to T. E. B. Pope of the U.S. Bureau of Fisheries, Main Bay and East Bay had become isolated during the 1890s after lake levels dropped about 6 meters during the previous 25 to 30 years. Besides Devils Lake, other major lakes nearby included Pelican Lake to the west and, to the east, East Devils Lake, Swan Lake, West Stump Lake and East Stump Lake, in that order.
Water Supply and Overflows
Devils Lake receives nearly all of its water from surface runoff and direct precipitation. Most surface-water runoff originates from a chain of remnant lakes located a few kilometers north of Devils Lake, although many of these smaller lakes have now merged with Devils Lake as the water levels rise. Total annual inflows ranged from near zero during the drought-stricken 1930s to nearly 400,000 acre-feet in 1993. Inflows, averaging 65,500 acre-feet annually between 1950 and 1993, rose to 317,000 acre-feet annually between 1993 and 2000, a fivefold increase. The years 1993 to 1995 contributed 24 percent of all inflow to Devils Lake between 1950 and 1995.
If Devils Lake rises approximately two additional meters and begins overflowing, as scientists predict it will, lake waters will enter the Sheyenne River. The Sheyenne, which originates 50 kilometers west of the rivers juncture with the Tolna Coulee outlet, meanders on an easterly course that lies about 15 kilometers south of the Devils Lake Basin. After turning south, the river is impounded by a Corps of Engineers dam located 20 kilometers north of Valley City, a town of about 6,300 residents. The dams narrow reservoir extends 43 kilometers upstream and contains about 71,000 acre-feet of water at full capacity. After passing through Valley City, the river joins the Red River of the North near the city of Fargo. The Red River flows northward before emptying into Canadas Lake Winnipeg.
Like climate predictions in general, predictions about when the current lake will overflow are rife with uncertainty. For example, in a report published in 2008, the U.S. Geological Survey predicted that the probability of the lake exceeding 443 meters between years 2008 and 2015 was only 10 percent, but the lake reached that elevation in 2011. Also predicted was a 50-percent probability that the lake would not exceed an elevation of 442 meters between 2008 and 2040. In fact, the lake had reached 442 meters by June 2009. Recent computer simulations predict that the probability of the lake overflowing by 2030 is only 15 to 20 percent, even with planned man-made outlets in operation. That scenario may prove to be far too optimistic, however, given that precipitation totals during water year 2011 , which are forecast to continue, raised the lake 0.7 meters.
男子大喊"圣经里面没有"妇女的祝圣仪式
煎蛋小学堂:英语百科(视频+中英字幕) 第4课:地球上最热的地方在哪?
为什么强奸出现在了大多数宗教的开端
煎蛋小学堂:英语百科(视频+中英字幕) 第21课:你应该畏惧的寄生虫
煎蛋小学堂:英语百科(视频+中英字幕) 第16课:擦手纸对比烘手机,哪个更卫生?
煎蛋小学堂:英语百科(视频+中英字幕) 第13课:埃博拉病毒 怎么又是蝙蝠的错
60秒学英语(视频+文本) 第207期:《行尸走肉》和《权利的游戏》
我们从来没听说过的十件忍者秘密武器
60秒学英语(视频+文本) 第208期:我爸是钢铁侠!
印尼史前岩画可追溯至4万年前
煎蛋小学堂:英语百科(视频+中英字幕) 第19课:颠覆人类世界观的量子理论
哪位美国作家最应该立传
清酒配汉堡 能拯救日本酒文化吗
煎蛋小学堂:英语百科(视频+中英字幕) 第8课:太空站里,宇航员们是怎么洗头的
煎蛋小学堂:英语百科(视频+中英字幕) 第9课:公共马桶的正确使用方法
煎蛋小学堂:英语百科(视频+中英字幕) 第2课:生孩子和蛋疼那个更痛?
煎蛋小学堂:英语百科(视频+中英字幕) 第7课:燃烧200卡路里奇葩方式
煎蛋小学堂:英语百科(视频+中英字幕) 第20课:世界上规模最大的实验
见证2014国际大事件,第一部分(图片集)
中国1945 毛的革命与美国命中注定的选择
巴生谷最好的12道鸡饭(多图)
煎蛋小学堂:英语百科(视频+中英字幕) 第18课:用手指尖平衡铅笔的最佳方法
数百万的中国观众着迷西方电视剧
一名伊朗原教旨主义者在西方的性指南
摇尾乞怜与狐假虎威 日本悲剧的根源
我对于反智主义的抗争
何思文:西方媒体为何热爱诋毁中国
为什么美国犹太人圣诞节期间吃中国菜
不是老人变坏了 而是坏人变老了
煎蛋小学堂:英语百科(视频+中英字幕) 第5课:长铅笔,短铅笔,哪个才是好铅笔
| 不限 |
| 英语教案 |
| 英语课件 |
| 英语试题 |
| 不限 |
| 不限 |
| 上册 |
| 下册 |
| 不限 |