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Dust blowing off of the shrinking Great Salt Lake is eroding Wasatch snowpack and that could eventually threaten drinking water

The winds kicked up in Utah’s West Desert ahead of a late-season storm blowing out of the south and into the Wasatch Mountains, which were then coated with a heavier-than-usual snowpack. But soon the winds shifted west and scraped up particles from the bed of the Great Salt Lake, left exposed from chronically receding lake levels.

The wind event on April 13, 2017 was just what McKenzie Skiles, a young professor of geography who harbors a deep fascination with snow, was waiting for.

She left her office in Salt Lake City to visit a study plot she and her University of Utah research team set up at the town of Alta high up in the Wasatch’s Little Cottonwood Canyon.