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  • Visitors look out over the Lake Mills Reservoir formed by the Glines Canyon Dam on the Elwha River in Olympic National Park, Washington.
    101126_7381.JPG
  • Retention dam at the Boulder Reservoir outside Boulder, Colorado. The water retreats from the dam by the end of Summer.
    090926_5694.JPG
  • Retention dam at the Boulder Reservoir outside Boulder, Colorado. The water retreats from the dam by the end of Summer.
    090926_5779_pan.JPG
  • Visitors look out over the Lake Mills Reservoir formed by the Glines Canyon Dam on the Elwha River in Olympic National Park, Washington.
    101126_7381_pan.JPG
  • Power house of the lower dam of the Elwha River, in Olympic National Park, Washington. The removal of the upper and lower dams is scheduled for 2012.
    070824_2913.JPG
  • A Chinese worker with a SinoHydro helmet flashes the peace (V) sign for a photo at the construction site for Dam #5 on the Nam Ou River, Laos.
    140124_112004.JPG
  • Robert Hahn carries his packraft down the original river channel - now a construction site for Dam #5 - on the Nam Ou River, Laos.
    140124_121535.JPG
  • A trout lies dead on a metal grate draining water through a retention dam at Lake Irwin, Gunnison National Forest, Colorado.
    110621_7409.JPG
  • A trout lies dead on a metal grate draining water through a retention dam at Lake Irwin, Gunnison National Forest, Colorado.
    110621_7405.JPG
  • A metal beer can lies in the dried patterned mud below the retention dam at the Boulder Reservoir outside Boulder, Colorado. The water retreats from the dam by the end of Summer.
    090926_5715.JPG
  • A metal soda can lies in the dried patterned mud below the retention dam at the Boulder Reservoir outside Boulder, Colorado. The water retreats from the dam by the end of Summer.
    090926_5762.JPG
  • A park sign prohibits swimming in the reservoir, pictured dry, created by Barker Dam in Wonderland of Rocks, Joshua Tree National Park, California. Built by cattle ranchers, the dam holds back rain water, a precious commodity in the desert.
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  • A man is lost in thought at his home while being asked questions about Nam Ou River Dam #6 which will inundate his village Ban Kor Man Mai (?), Laos. He expressed sadness over the flooding of the riverside funeral sites, but - having had two children die due to lack of medical care - appreciated the value of the road and other services promised at his future, government provided home.
    140120_163659.JPG
  • Sunset over traditional thatched roof huts, trees, and bamboo in Ban Sop Khip, Laos, a village that will be completely inundated by Nam Ou River Dam #5.
    140122_162433.JPG
  • Men adjust the position of the stilts for a new house being built in Ban Pak Luang, Laos. The raised stilts help protect from mud and floods common during the rainy season. The village would only suffer minor inundation by proposed Dam #3 (whose construction has not yet commenced).
    140129_072920A.JPG
  • Mist slowly lifts from the forests and mountains surrounding Diablo Lake, an artificial reservoir formed by Diablo Dam in the heart of North Cascades National Park, Washington.
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  • Mist slowly lifts from the forests and mountains surrounding Diablo Lake, an artificial reservoir formed by Diablo Dam in the heart of North Cascades National Park, Washington.
    081004_2171.JPG
  • Women and children stay warm by a fire and process reeds used to manufacture brooms in Ban Had Dan, Laos. The clusters, wrapped with bamboo and made into brooms, are sold to neighboring Vietnam and fetch 3,000 kip ($0.37) - a cottage industry in this village. The village would only be partially inundated by proposed Dam #3 (whose construction has not yet commenced).
    140127_181541.JPG
  • Fish biologist Christian Torgersen talks with James Starr during a snorkel survey of the Elwha River, in Olympic National Park, Washington. The research is a collaborative effort between the National Park Service and other agencies to establish a baseline of fish distribution and habitat structure for the entire river before the removal of the upper and lower dams, scheduled for 2012.
    070822_2681.JPG
  • Children play in the sandy passageways of Ait Bounou, an ancient kasbah, or fortified village, in the Moroccan Sahara. The town is quickly falling into ruin as the inhabitants flee the drying well and the advancement of the dunes expedited by a 16-year drought and the damming of the Draa River.
    071108_9446.JPG
  • Children pose in a sandy passageway of Ait Bounou, an ancient kasbah, or fortified village, in the Moroccan Sahara. The town is quickly falling into ruin as the inhabitants flee the drying well and the advancement of the dunes expedited by a 16-year drought and the damming of the Draa River.
    071108_9447.JPG
  • The setting sun illuminates the crumbling walls  of Ait Bounou, an ancient kasbah, or fortified village, in the Moroccan Sahara on November 8, 2007. The town is quickly falling into ruin as the inhabitants flee the drying well and the advancement of the dunes expedited by a 16-year drought and the damming of the Draa River.
    071108_9459.JPG
  • Fish biologists Christian Torgersen and others stand on the bank during a snorkel survey of the Elwha River, in Olympic National Park, Washington. The research is a collaborative effort between the National Park Service and other agencies to establish a baseline of fish distribution and habitat structure for the entire river before the removal of the upper and lower dams scheduled for 2012.
    070822_2744.JPG
  • Fish biologist James Starr, of the Wild Salmon Center, stands below mossy trees on the bank of the Elwha River, in Olympic National Park, Washington. The research is a collaborative effort between the National Park Service and other agencies to establish a baseline of fish distribution and habitat structure for the entire river before the removal of the upper and lower dams, scheduled for 2012.
    070822_2674.JPG
  • A man and woman walk through one of the many covered passageways in Ait Bounou, an ancient kasbah, or fortified village, in the Moroccan Sahara. The town is quickly falling into ruin as the inhabitants flee the drying well and the advancement of the dunes expedited by a 16-year drought and the damming of the Draa River.
    071108_9441.JPG
  • The crumbling walls of Ait Bounou, an ancient kasbah, or fortified village, in the Moroccan Sahara. The town is quickly falling into ruin as the inhabitants flee the drying well and the advancement of the dunes expedited by a 16-year drought and the damming of the Draa River.
    071108_9435.JPG
  • A modern light post stands overlooking the crumbling walls and mosque of Ait Bounou, an ancient kasbah, or fortified village, in the Moroccan Sahara. The town is quickly falling into ruin as the inhabitants flee the drying well and the advancement of the dunes expedited by a 16-year drought and the damming of the Draa River.
    071108_9430.JPG
  • Sunset illuminates the dome roof of a Marabout, or tomb of a venerated saint, in Ait Bounou, an ancient kasbah, or fortified village, in the Moroccan Sahara. The town is quickly falling into ruin as the inhabitants flee the drying well and the advancement of the dunes expedited by a 16-year drought and the damming of the Draa River.
    071108_9427.JPG
  • The setting sun illuminates the crumbling walls and mosque minaret of Ait Bounou, an ancient kasbah, or fortified village, in the Moroccan Sahara on November 8, 2007. The town is quickly falling into ruin as the inhabitants flee the drying well and the advancement of the dunes expedited by a 16-year drought and the damming of the Draa River.
    071108_9432.JPG
  • The Elwha River weaves through the lush forest wilderness of Olympic National Park, Washington on August 22, 2007. The removal of two dams in the lower river, scheduled for 2012, will reopen after nearly a century these pristine spawning grounds in the upper river to once flourishing salmon and steelhead populations.
    070822_2697.JPG
  • Fish biologist Christian Torgersen (USGS) shows his fatigue during a snorkel survey of the Elwha River, in Olympic National Park, Washington. The research is a collaborative effort between the National Park Service and other agencies to establish a baseline of fish distribution and habitat structure for the entire river before the removal of the upper and lower dams scheduled for 2012.
    070822_2694.JPG
  • Fish biologists stand on the shore of the Elwha River, in Olympic National Park, Washington. The research is a collaborative effort between the National Park Service and other agencies to establish a baseline of fish distribution and habitat structure for the entire river before the removal of the upper and lower dams, scheduled for 2012.
    070822_2649.JPG
  • Fish biologist Sam Brenkman, of the National Park Service, swims in the Elwha River, in Olympic National Park, Washington. The research is a collaborative effort between the National Park Service and other agencies to establish a baseline of fish distribution and habitat structure for the entire river before the removal of the upper and lower dams, scheduled for 2012.
    070822_2638.JPG
  • Sunset casts a long shadow across the dirt road leading to Ait Bounou, an ancient kasbah, or fortified village, in the Moroccan Sahara. The town is quickly falling into ruin as the inhabitants flee the drying well and the advancement of the dunes expedited by a 16-year drought and the damming of the Draa River.
    071108_9424.JPG
  • The crumbling walls of Ait Bounou, an ancient kasbah, or fortified village, in the Moroccan Sahara. The town is quickly falling into ruin as the inhabitants flee the drying well and the advancement of the dunes expedited by a 16-year drought and the damming of the Draa River.
    071108_9436.JPG
  • A cement block lies half-buried in the cracked mud in the floodplain of the Mino River below new Portomarin, Galicia, Spain. The river was dammed in the 1960s to create the Belesar Reservoir, flooding the original town of Portomarin and leaving large mud flats when the water level in the reservoir drops.
    071012_4996.JPG
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