Low Water Levels Reveal Body in Barrel at Lake Mead, Officials Say More Are Likely to Be Found

Wire Service
By Wire Service
May 3, 2022US News
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Low Water Levels Reveal Body in Barrel at Lake Mead, Officials Say More Are Likely to Be Found
Boaters use the launch ramp at the Las Vegas Boat Harbor marina in the Lake Mead National Recreation Area, Nev. on July 29, 2007. (Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

The plunging water level in Lake Mead—the country’s largest reservoir, besieged by drought—unveiled another disturbing discovery over the weekend, police say: a body in a barrel.

A person who was spending time at the lake Sunday afternoon found the barrel, according to Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Homicide Lieutenant Ray Spencer. The person could see the remains in the barrel because it was corroded.

Investigators believe the body to be that of a homicide victim from the 1980s, based on the items recovered from the barrel, Spencer says.

“The lake has drained dramatically over the last 15 years,” Spencer said, noting that “it’s likely that we will find additional bodies that have been dumped in Lake Mead” as the water level drops more.

“The barrel was likely dropped hundreds of yards off the shore back then,” Spencer said, “but that area is now considered the shoreline.”

Homicide investigators plan to consult with scientists at the University of Nevada Las Vegas to determine whether the rate of corrosion is consistent with the barrel being in freshwater for that long.

The body underwent an autopsy Monday morning, Spencer says. Autopsy results were not yet available Monday afternoon, according to the Clark County Coroner’s office.

About 25 million people in Arizona, Nevada, California, and Mexico rely on Lake Mead water, which has been running out at an alarming rate amid a megadrought.

As of Monday the lake’s water level was around 1,054 feet above sea level—about 160 feet below its 2000 level, when it was last considered full. It’s the lowest level on record for the reservoir since it was filled in the 1930s.

In August, the federal government declared an unprecedented water shortage on the Colorado River, which feeds the reservoir. That triggered water consumption cuts for states in the Southwest beginning in January.

Last week, the lake’s low water level also exposed one of the reservoir’s original water intake valves for the first time. The valve had been in service since 1971, but it can no longer draw water, according to the Southern Nevada Water Authority, the agency responsible for managing water resources for 2.2 million people in southern Nevada, including Las Vegas.

Upstream on the Colorado River, water levels at Lake Powell—the country’s second-largest reservoir—have also been plummeting and recently dipped below a threshold that threatens not only downstream water supply but also hydropower generation for the surrounding communities.

Across the West, extreme drought has already taken a major toll this year, with around 91 percent of the region in some level of drought, according to the US Drought Monitor. Extreme and exceptional drought, the two worst designations, expanded across New Mexico, Arizona, and Colorado—all states that are part of the Colorado River basin.

The CNN Wire contributed to this report.

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