• MODIS Pic of the Day 26 May 2023

    From Dan Richter@1:317/3 to All on Fri May 26 12:00:38 2023
    May 26, 2023 - Tulare Lake Reappears

    [image05262023_main.jpg] [image05262023_rollover.jpg]

    May 24, 2023 June 6, 2022
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    A record-breaking snowpack accumulation in the Sierra Nevada in the
    winter of 2022-2023 along with unusually heavy spring precipitation has
    brought Tulare Lake back to life. On May 24, 2023, the Moderate
    Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on board NASA’s Terra
    satellite acquired a false-color image of Lake Tulare filled with an
    abundance of water.

    In this type of image, water appears deep blue, open land looks tan,
    vegetation is green, and cloud can be white or tinted light blue, while
    snow appears bright electric blue. The deep blue Tulare Lake is the
    largest lake in the image, filling the lowest point of the San Joaquin
    Valley Basin. Several rivers and other lakes are visible, including
    Kern Lake (south of Tulare). All are filled by the recent rains as well
    as the “big melt” frees water from snowpack. Meanwhile, the mountain
    peaks remain covered with snow. A cloud bank covers the lower left
    (southwest) portion of the image.

    To truly appreciate the change brought about by the big melt, click the
    dates to reveal a second Terra MODIS image of the same area acquired on
    June 6, 2022. Here Tulare Lake is essentially non-existent, and the
    lakebed is covered by agricultural fields. Kern Lake is visible, but
    very small compared to the May 2023 image.

    Tulare Lake was once the largest freshwater lake west of the
    Mississippi River, covering about 1,800 square miles of the Valley
    floor and stretching about 60 miles from north to south. In the 1870s,
    Tulare Lake was a productive fishery as well as providing as many as
    300 dozen terrapins (a type of turtle) to market each year. Even at
    that time, the lake waters rose and fell seasonally— sometimes leaving
    barely any water in the heat of summer— and strong winds could move the
    shorelines several miles over just a few hours.

    Since the 1920s, the rivers that fed the lake have been dammed and
    diverted for agriculture and other uses. The lakebed has since been
    covered with farms that produce a variety of crops and livestock. Since
    that time, cities have sprung up on the edges of the historic lakebed,
    including Corcoran, the largest city in the vicinity. The revival of
    Tulare Lake has brought floodwaters into Corcoran, and they began to
    arrive as early as March. The town responded by shoring up its levees,
    which had protected the town from previous wet years but may not be
    tall enough by the time this year’s big melt delivers all the snowpack
    into Tulare Lake.

    According to the California Department of Water Resources (DWR), as of
    May 25 the statewide snowpack was 310 percent of average for this date,
    among the largest ever recorded. The snowpack in the Southern Sierras
    was an even more impressive 407 percent of average for this date. The
    size and distribution of this year’s snowpack is posing severe flood
    risk to some areas of the state, according to DWR, especially in the
    San Joaquin Valley.

    Image Facts
    Satellite: Terra
    Date Acquired: 5/24/2023
    Resolutions: 1km ( B), 500m (356.6 KB), 250m (200.7 KB)
    Bands Used: 1,4,3
    Image Credit: MODIS Land Rapid Response Team, NASA GSFC



    https://modis.gsfc.nasa.gov/gallery/individual.php?db_date=2023-05-26

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