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People who've been to Lake Tahoe often go on and on about the lake's remarkably blue hue and clear sparkle, and for good reason. But Tahoe's trademark characteristic could vanish as soon as within the next ten years thanks to everyone's favorite climatological spoilsport, global warming.
"What we expect is that deep mixing of Lake Tahoe's water layers will become less frequent, even nonexistent, depleting the bottom waters of oxygen," said Geoffrey Schladow, director of the Tahoe Environmental Research Center at U.C. Davis.The researchers are currently scrambling to determine whether lowered emissions would have any effect on slowing or preventing the decline of Tahoe's deep water mixing. At current rates, Lake Tahoe could stop its mixing process completely as early as 2019.
"A permanently stratified Lake Tahoe becomes just like any other lake or pond," Schladow said. "It is no longer this unique, effervescent jewel, the finest example of nature's grandeur."

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