scorecard
  1. Home
  2. international
  3. news
  4. Photos show the 'bathtub ring' along a parched Los Angeles reservoir as California's drought grows more dire

Photos show the 'bathtub ring' along a parched Los Angeles reservoir as California's drought grows more dire

Ted Soqui   

Photos show the 'bathtub ring' along a parched Los Angeles reservoir as California's drought grows more dire
  • Gov. Gavin Newsom declared a drought emergency in 41 California counties.
  • Reservoirs across the state are running dry.
  • Ted Soqui captured the dramatic "bathtub ring" at the San Gabriel Reservoir outside Los Angeles.

The 3-mile-long San Gabriel Reservoir, nestled in the mountains above Los Angeles, is running dry.

California had significantly less rain and snow this year, and drought conditions this summer have left much of the state increasingly parched.

Across California, many reservoirs and lakes are experiencing a "bathtub-ring" phenomenon: Declining water levels expose white rings around the edges of these bodies of water - the result of calcium carbonate and other minerals attached to the rock. The more rings that are visible, the lower the water level.

Photographs of the San Gabriel Reservoir offer a hint at how severe the drought could get in Southern California.

In May, Gov. Gavin Newsom of California expanded the state's drought-emergency declaration to cover 41 counties, which represent 30% of the state's population. The governor's office attributed the situation to especially hot temperatures brought on by the climate crisis, as well as extremely dry mountaintop soil that absorbs water that would otherwise flow into the state's water-collection systems.

"Extraordinarily warm temperatures in April and early May separate this critically dry year from all others on California record," the governor's office said in a statement.

The giant reservoirs in Northern California - Folsom Lake, Lake Oroville, and Shasta Lake - are also seeing low water levels after less snow and rain runoff came down from the Sierra Nevada mountain range.

Most of Los Angeles' water is pumped over the Tejon Pass from Northern California. The water from the San Gabriel Reservoir, which holds more than 54 million cubic meters of water when full, mostly serves the San Gabriel Valley.

Significant rain and snow fall is not expected until November.

Ted Soqui is a photojournalist in LA. See more of his work here.

READ MORE ARTICLES ON



Popular Right Now



Advertisement