::
North America
::
Mexico
::
Baja California
:: Colorado River Delta
Colorado River Delta
World - Continents
Africa Map
Asia Map
Central America and the Caribbean Map
Europe Map
Middle East Map
North America Map
South America Map
See More
North America - Countries
Central America and the Caribbean Map
Guatemala Map
Mexico Map
Panama Map
Mexico - States
Aguascalientes Map
Baja California Map
Baja California Sur Map
Campeche Map
Chiapas Map
Chihuahua Map
Coahuila de Zaragoza Map
Colima Map
Durango Map
Guanajuato Map
Guerrero Map
Hidalgo Map
Jalisco Map
Mexico City Map
Michoacán de Ocampo Map
Morelos Map
Nayarit Map
Nuevo León Map
Oaxaca Map
Puebla Map
Querétaro Arteaga Map
Quintana Roo Map
San Luis Potosí Map
Sinaloa Map
Sonora Map
State of Mexico Map
Tabasco Map
Tamaulipas Map
Tlaxcala Map
Veracruz Map
Yucatán Map
Zacatecas Map
Baja California - Cities
Ensenada, Baja California
Mexicali, Baja California
Playas de Rosarito, Baja California
Tijuana, Baja California
Not more than 80 years ago the mighty Colorado River flowed unhindered from northern Colorado through Utah, the Grand Canyon, Arizona, and Mexico before pouring out into the Gulf of California. But as one can see in this image of the Colorado River Delta taken on September 8, 2000, by the Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER), flying aboard the Terra spacecraft, irrigation and urban sprawl now prevent the river from reaching its final destination. The Colorado River can be seen in dark blue at the topmost central part of this image. The river comes to an end just south of the multicolored patchwork of farmlands in the northwestern corner of the image and then fans out at the base of the Sierra de Juarez Mountains. A hundred years ago the river would have cut through this entire picture and plowed straight through to the Gulf of California, the mouth of which can be seen in solid blue at the lower righthand corner of the image. Nearly all the water that flows into the Colorado River is now siphoned off for use in crop irrigation and for residential use. In fact, roughly only 10 percent of all the water that flows into the Colorado makes it into Mexico and most of that is used by the Mexican people for farming. The bluish purple river that appears to be flowing from the Gulf of California to the north is actually an inlet that formed in the bed of the Colorado River after it receded. The island at the entrance to the Gulf of California is the Isle Montague. The gray areas surrounding this inlet and the gulf itself are mud flats created by sediments once carried by the river. The Hoover Dam built in 1935 and the Glen Canyon dam built in 1956 now trap most of the rivers sediments long before they find their way to the gulf. As to the other features on the image, the flat yellow expanse to the east of the farms is the Gran Desirto. Between the farmland and the desert one can see a dark blue pool covered with patches of green. Known as Sienega de Santa Clara, this salt-water marsh formed by return irrigation is home to a huge population of birds, including the endangered Yuma Clapper Rail and the Southwestern Willow Flycatcher. The white patches to the southeast of this swampy area are salt packs that separate the marsh from the near lifeless salt lake extending east. For more information about the Colorado River Delta, see the image from March 27, 2001
Source:
Image courtesy NASA/GSFC/MITI/ERSDAC/JAROS, and U.S./Japan ASTER Science Team
Baja California - Categories of Maps
Colorado River Delta - Related Maps
[1] ::
2
Baja California Peninsula 2002
Satellite image of the Baja California peninsula
Gulf of California
Plumes over Baja California
Phytoplankton in the Gulf of California
The Colorado River
Satellite Image of Guadalupe Island
Guadalupe Island, off Baja California
Hurricane Douglas South of Baja California
Satellite image of Vortex street off Baja California
Fires in Northern Baja California
Phytoplankyon Bloom in the Gulf of California
[1] ::
2
Baja California - Cities
Ensenada, Baja California
Mexicali, Baja California
Playas de Rosarito, Baja California
Tijuana, Baja California
Sponsored by
InmoMundo