News

An aerial view of floodwaters inundating farmland in the reemerging Tulare Lake, in California’s Central Valley, on April 26, 2023 near Corcoran, California.
Satellite images taken over the past six weeks have captured the re-emergence of Tulare Lake in California’s San Joaquin Valley and show how suddenly water flooded and settled across miles of ...
While some groundwater managers in the beleaguered Tulare Lake subbasin look for ways to come together on pumping limits in ...
Tulare Lake as seen from an earth-orbiting satellite on Feb. 1, 2023, left, and on April 30, 2023, showing the increased flooding of the formerly dry lakebed from winter storms and spring snowmelt ...
NASA’s MODIS satellite imaging system shows where floodwaters refilled parts of the once-dry Tulare Lake in California over recent weeks. The false-color images show water in deep blue and ...
Tulare Lake used to be the largest lake west of the Mississippi River. ... This satellite image shows the San Joaquin Valley on March 16, 2022 — about a year before Tulare Lake returned.
-- New satellite images from the NASA Earth Observatory show that Tulare Lake is still growing in Kings County. The pictures show the progression of the flooding between March 2 and April 28.
An aerial view of Tulare Lake, where the Kings and Tule rivers meet in the basin, is shown in this 1983 file photo during a heavy flood year. Until the late 1800s, ...
RELATED: Growing Tulare Lake captured in NASA satellite images. Over the last several months, the once dried-up land has filled with about 178 square miles of water from four Central Valley rivers.
Tulare Lake as seen from an earth-orbiting satellite on Feb. 1, 2023, left, and on April 30, 2023, showing the increased flooding of the formerly dry lakebed from winter storms and spring snowmelt ...
An aerial view of Tulare Lake, where the Kings and Tule rivers meet in the basin, is shown in this 1983 file photo during a heavy flood year. Until the late 1800s, ...
Tulare Lake as seen from an earth-orbiting satellite on Feb. 1, 2023, left, and on April 30, 2023, showing the increased flooding of the formerly dry lakebed from winter storms and spring snowmelt ...