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The white “bathtub ring” surrounding Lake Mead has become one of the most visible warnings of the American Southwest’s water crisis. Footage recorded near Hoover Dam now shows a 140-foot gap between the current waterline and where the reservoir once stood—a stark mineral scar left behind as water levels continue to fall. This pale band on the canyon walls is not erosion. It is calcium carbonate and mineral deposits, left behind after decades of contact with reservoir water. As Lake Mead drops, the ring remains—creating a permanent geological record of how much water has disappeared. Lake Mead, the largest reservoir in the United States, was designed to hold more than 26 million acre-feet of water. By late 2025, it held only about 30% of its capacity, following more than two decades of declining inflows from the Colorado River. The Colorado River supplies water to around 40 million people across seven U.S. states and northern Mexico, including major cities such as Las Vegas, Phoenix, Los Angeles, and San Diego. It also supports one of the most productive agricultural regions in North America. But the river was divided based on assumptions made over a century ago—assumptions that modern science has shown were overly optimistic. Today the basin faces a combination of pressures: Declining Rocky Mountain snowpack Rising temperatures accelerating evaporation Increasing demand from cities and agriculture A century-old water allocation system built on incorrect flow estimates At the same time, the drop in Lake Mead threatens Hoover Dam’s hydroelectric power generation, which supplies electricity to roughly 1.3 million people across Nevada, Arizona, and California. If water levels fall far enough, the reservoir could approach critical thresholds known as power pool and eventually dead pool, where water can no longer pass through the dam to generate electricity or flow downstream. Negotiations between the seven Colorado River Basin states are currently underway to determine how water will be managed after existing operating guidelines expire in 2026. The decisions made in the next few years may determine the long-term future of water security across the American Southwest. The white ring on the canyon walls of Lake Mead is not just a visual landmark. It is a geological record of a reservoir—and a river system—under historic stress. #lakemead #river #breakingnews