Glen Canyon Dam flood experiment hopes to help Colorado River levels | USA TODAY

Officials are releasing a flood experiment from Lake Powell to refill low water levels in Lake Mead and the Colorado River following severe drought.

RELATED: Lake Mead: Bodies, boats, buildings emerge from reservoir

Federal officials on Monday began three days of high water flows from Lake Powell to help improve environmental conditions on the Colorado River through the Grand Canyon. The goal is to move accumulated sediment downstream and begin to rebuild beaches on the river that have eroded in recent years. It's the first such high-flow experiment at the dam since 2018 and the first during spring runoff season.

The engineered flood, which began when the Bureau of Reclamation opened bypass tubes at Glen Canyon Dam early Monday, mimics some of the river's pre-dam flows, when snowmelt runoff from the mountains far upstream would raise water levels and redistribute sediment. Since Glen Canyon Dam's completion in 1963, the water flowing into the Grand Canyon has carried less sediment, much of the river's sand and other materials trapped behind the dam.

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