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Archaeological sites in Grand Canyon National Park along the Colorado River are eroding owing to six decades of Glen Canyon Dam operations.

J Environ Manage

September 2023

U.S. Geological Survey, Southwest Biological Science Center, Grand Canyon Monitoring and Research Center, Flagstaff, AZ, USA; Fort Lewis College, Geosciences Department and Four Corners Water Center, Durango, CO, USA.

The archaeological record documenting human history in deserts is commonly concentrated along rivers in terraces or other landforms built by river sediment deposits. Today that record is at risk in many river valleys owing to human resource and infrastructure development activities, including the construction and operation of dams. We assessed the effects of the operations of Glen Canyon Dam - which, since its closure in 1963, has imposed drastic changes to flow, sediment supply and distribution, and riparian vegetation - on a population of 362 archaeological sites in the Colorado River corridor through Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona, USA.

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