Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumThe Southwestern Water Wars - How drought is producing tensions in Texas
WIMBERLEY, Tex. WE dont want you here, warned the county commissioner, pointing an accusatory finger at the drilling company executives as 600 local residents rose to their feet. We want you to leave Hays County.
Normally, my small town is a placid place nestled in the Texas Hill Country, far from controversy, a peaceful hours drive west of Austin. Pop. 2,582, Wimberley was founded as a mill town on a creek. Today its part artist colony, part cowboy town known for its natural beauty and its cool, clear springs and rivers that wind through soaring cypress trees.
But these are not normal times. The suburbs of Austin close in every year. Recently, the suburb of Buda and developers enlisted a company from faraway Houston to drain part of the Trinity Aquifer, the source of the Hill Countrys water. An old-fashioned, Western-style water war has erupted.
Across Texas and the Southwest, the scene is repeated in the face of a triple threat: booming population, looming drought and the worsening effects of climate change.
And it is a story that has played out before. It was in the Southwest that complex human cultures in the United States first arose. Around A.D. 800, the people called the Ancient Ones the Mimbres, Mogollon, Chaco and other Native American cultures flourished in what was then a green, if not lush, region. They channeled water into fields and built cities on the mesas and into the cliffs, fashioning societies, rituals and art.
Then around 1200 they all disappeared. Or so the legend goes. In reality, these cultures were slowly and painfully extinguished. The rivers dried. The fields died. The cities were unsustainable as drought stretched from years to decades, becoming what scientists today call a megadrought. Parts of these cultures were absorbed by the Pueblo and Navajo people; parts were simply stamped out.
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http://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/13/opinion/the-southwestern-water-wars.html?action=click&contentCollection=DealBook&module=MostEmailed&version=Full®ion=Marginalia&src=me&pgtype=article
pscot
(21,024 posts)awoke_in_2003
(34,582 posts)is the best part of Texas.