Snake Valley (Great Basin)

Snake Valley is a north-south trending valley that straddles the NevadaUtah border in the central Great Basin. It is bound by the Snake Range and the Deep Creek Mountains to the west and the Confusion Range to the east. The valley is the gateway to Great Basin National Park and Lehman Caves, which are located in the western part of the valley and on the southern Snake Range.

Snake Valley
Sheep grazing in southern Snake Valley
Snake Valley is located in Utah
Snake Valley
Snake Valley
Snake Valley is located in the United States
Snake Valley
Snake Valley
Long-axis directionNorth-South
Geography
Coordinates39°51′00″N 113°45′03″W / 39.85000°N 113.75083°W / 39.85000; -113.75083

People edit

Though it is relatively isolated from civilization today, the human presence in Snake Valley goes back 12,000 years.[1] The oldest accessible evidence of this is the Baker Archeological Site,[2] a Fremont culture habitat maintained by the BLM.

Current communities in the valley include Baker in Nevada and Garrison, Burbank, Eskdale, Callao, Partoun, Trout Creek, Gandy, and Border in Utah. Today, the main industries in the valley are farming and ranching, especially sheep ranching.

Water edit

 
Snowpack in the high mountains west of Snake Valley contributes to the (relatively) large amount of groundwater available in the area

Snake Valley is noted for a water project involving the Las Vegas Valley,[3] that would target the underlying Basin and Range Carbonate Aquifer, an aquifer that supplies local agriculture and is a relatively large source of water for this region. Though Snake Valley and the surrounding area is arid and part of the Great Basin Desert, the (relatively) high ranges like the Snake Range, Deep Creek Mountains, and the Schell Creek Range allow a large snowpack that recharges the regional aquifer.[4] This 'additional' water manifests itself in the many springs, wetlands, and lakes that make Snake Valley surprisingly lush. Thus, Snake Valley has long been a target of wildlife and farmers, with at least one farm (Dearden Ranch in Burbank, Utah) in continual operation since the 1880s.

 
The most prominent body of water in Snake Valley, Pruess Lake

The water development project is proposed by the Southern Nevada Water Authority (SNWA), the water authority that services the Las Vegas area. In the proposal, a pipeline would be built from Snake Valley (and Spring Valley) to supply pumped groundwater to be used as municipal water for the Clark County, Nevada region, with amounts ranging up to 137,000 acre-feet (169,000,000 m3) per year.[5] Local ranchers and environmentalists have objected to this removal of water from local aquifers,[6] comparing the situation to Owens Valley, California and noting local drawdowns and springs drying up allegedly, but indeterminably, from local agricultural pumping, like at Needle Point Springs.[7] Enhanced demand on the water from locals and enhanced hydrogeologic monitoring have occurred as a result of this proposal, including the USGS's BARCASS study[8] and the Utah Geological Survey's Snake Valley Groundwater Monitoring Program.[9] Both studies have generally concluded that precipitation in the high mountains of the area are the source of the far away but anomalously large springs at Fish Springs National Wildlife Refuge.

Others support the system, noting the importance of the growth and sustainability of the Las Vegas Valley. The largest advocate for the pipeline has been SNWA General Manager Patricia Mulroy.[10] Mulroy has continuously claimed that this water source must be tapped to keep Las Vegas running. Others agree, and have used New York City as an example of proper water management. New York has relied on water from the Catskills and Hudson Valley region for more than a century, and due to proper management, these ecosystems continue to flourish, despite the allocation of the water in the Catskills and Hudson Valley.

References edit

  1. ^ "Protect Snake Valley - History". protectsnakevalley.com.
  2. ^ "Baker Archeological Site - Great Basin National Park (U.S. National Park Service)". Nps.gov. Retrieved June 17, 2014.
  3. ^ Utah, Nevada agree to split the aquifer, American Water Works Association, Streamlines, September 1, 2009 Volume 1, Number 18
  4. ^ "USEE :: Utah Society for Environmental Education - Groundwater in Snake Valley, Nevada, Utah". July 28, 2011. Archived from the original on July 28, 2011.
  5. ^ "SNWA Water Resource Plan" (PDF). Retrieved June 17, 2014.
  6. ^ "Water". Protectsnakevalley.com. Retrieved June 17, 2014.
  7. ^ "Library of Congress Web Archives". Archived from the original (PDF) on June 13, 2009. Retrieved June 30, 2023.
  8. ^ [1] Archived August 14, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ State of Utah. "Snake Valley Ground-Water Monitoring-Well Project - Utah Geological Survey". Geology.utah.gov. Archived from the original on November 3, 2010. Retrieved June 17, 2014.
  10. ^ Richard Rychtarik (August 2011). "Meet Pat Mulroy, Southern Nevada's water champion". Vegas Inc. Retrieved June 17, 2014.

External links edit