The dying River
The Colorado River once stretched over 2,000 kilometers, from
the snow-capped slopes of the Rocky Mountains to the Gulf of
California, across the western United States and Mexico.
But the river in the desert of Sonora has been drying up since
the 80s and no longer reaches the delta, because extensive
agriculture and diversion of water to metropolitan areas such
as Phoenix and Las Vegas led to changes in the course of the
river. Dams, huge canal systems, growing cities in the desert.
Today over 44 million people depend on the water of the
Colorado, but less and less snowfall in the Rocky Mountains,
due to the climate crisis, intensifies the struggle for water
rights. Farmers have to file for bankruptcy, real estate
developers buy farms just to get water rights.
The Cucupá, wich translates as „People of the river“, live in the
Colorado Delta. "As a child I often went swimming in the river,
today I fish in the wastewater from agriculture, which pictures
the Colorado River here with us," says Leticia Galavis Sainz (51).
"The Cucupá have always made a living from fishing, but
without the river our culture dies too!



View of Lake Mead from the Hoover Dam. Sediment deposits on the rock walls give an idea of the reach of former water levels. Sediment deposits on the The water level of Lake Mead, a reservoir about 50 kilometres from Las Vegas, has dropped significantly. Dammed by the Hoover Dam, it is the largest reservoir in the USA with a length of approx. 170 km. Lake Mead's water levels have fallen almost continuously since the last full fill (2000), with the exception of the winter of 2010/2011, the increases due to snowmelt in the Rocky Mountains could never compensate for the withdrawal over the summer months. In June 2021, the level fell to the lowest level since it was first filled in 1941.






















Project 2021- ongoing
Published by: Stern, LFI Magazine, NZZ, Geographical, Newsweek Japan, Vi Menn