Cultural sites are being revealed by a dwindling Lake Powell
More cultural sites have been revealed, presenting new challenges to land managers as well as opportunities for new archaeological research.
(Ecoflight) An aerial view of Navajo Canyon on Lake Powell, Thursday, April 14, 2022. The high water mark is near the boundary between Glen Canyon National Recreation Area and the Navajo Nation.
Zak is the southeast Utah reporter for The Tribune. He has been writing from Bluff, Utah, since 2015 and is the author of Confluence: Navigating the Personal & Political On Rivers of the New West. His second book, which will cover the decline of Lake Powell, is forthcoming from Torrey House Press in 2024.