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    Explore "great salt lake" with insightful episodes like "What we lose if the Great Salt Lake dries up" and "Utah’s ‘Environmental Nuclear Bomb’" from podcasts like ""Short Wave" and "The Daily"" and more!

    Episodes (2)

    What we lose if the Great Salt Lake dries up

    What we lose if the Great Salt Lake dries up
    Dotted across the Great Basin of the American West are salty, smelly lakes. The largest of these, by far, is the Great Salt Lake in Utah.

    But a recent report found that water diversions for farming, climate change and population growth could mean the lake essentially disappears within five years. Less water going in means higher concentrations of salt and minerals, which threatens the crucial ecological role saline lakes play across the West, as well as the health of the people who live nearby.

    On today's episode, Kirk takes Short Wave co-host Aaron Scott on an audio field trip to the endangered Great Salt Lake, and explains why losing the lake could be devastating for everyone from brine flies to the humans that live next door.

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    Utah’s ‘Environmental Nuclear Bomb’

    Utah’s ‘Environmental Nuclear Bomb’

    The Great Salt Lake is drying up.

    Soaring demand for water, exacerbated by drought and higher temperatures in the region, are shrinking the waters, which play such a crucial role in the landscape, ecology and weather of Salt Lake City and Utah.

    Can the lake be saved?

    Guest: Christopher Flavelle, a climate reporter for The New York Times.

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    Background reading: 

    For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.