Interactive Map: Indian Water Rights in the Colorado River Basin
Native American tribes are emerging leaders in the drying basin.
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Native American tribes are emerging leaders in the drying basin.
Warming water temperatures and destructive, non-native species threaten the world’s largest lake.
Bark beetles, water scarcity, and dying trees herald a region in ecological transition during the height of state’s four-year drought.
Water level’s could fall significantly due to development along the Omo River, the lake’s largest tributary.
Native Americans hold 20 percent of the basin’s water rights. How they use their water will shape the future of the Southwest.
Proposed oil and gas development zones in Coahuila are among the driest in the Americas.
Nutrient pollution from outdated sewage-treatment plants degrades water quality in the world’s deepest, oldest lake.
The world’s largest aquifers are under stress, according to a decade of data from the GRACE satellites.
Scientists do not know how much groundwater is left.
The largest lake in Iran is shrinking rapidly, threatening tourism and health.
Expert panel finds “scientifically indefensible” conclusions in 14-volume study.
Across continents and hemispheres, a growing list of human and environmental pressures threaten the world’s largest lakes, inhibiting their ability to supply water, drive economic activity, preserve biodiversity, and sustain communities.