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Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics
Water Current, Volume 27, No. 6, December 1995
Water Current, Volume 27, No. 6, December 1995
Water Current Newsletter
Buffer Strips Trap Contaminants
From the Director: Lack of Call of Proposals Sign of Politics at Work
Riparian Buffer Strips Prevent Pollution
Might Missouri Conference Topic
Manure Application Studied
Research Brief: A Multivariate Index Methodology for Landfill Site Characterization Using Geophysics and Geostatistics
Nebraska Water News
Guide for Sealing Wells Available from UNL
Symposium Focuses on Integrated Approach
Booklet Helps Find Water Information
Speaker Compares Public, Technical Views
Drijber Gets Into Microbial Communities
Dishrags Breeding Ground for Bacteria
Seminar Series to Present Views on Platte River Management
Water Current, Volume 27, No. 5, October 1995
Water Current, Volume 27, No. 5, October 1995
Water Current Newsletter
Third Festival of Color Attracts Thousands of Visitors
SEER Satellite Program Off to Promising Start
Nitrate Contamination Links South Korea, Nebraska
Federal Conjunctive Use, Kansas vs. Nebraska?
Nebraska Water News?
Money Down the River
Demo Project Receives IANR Team Award
Symposium to Address Aquifer Connection
Shock Chlorination Topic of NebGuide
Water on the Web
Poll Shows Water Top Natural Resources Concern
Water Current, Volume 27, No. 4, August 1995
Water Current, Volume 27, No. 4, August 1995
Water Current Newsletter
Tour Stresses New Technology
From the Director: Water Center Supports Groundwater Guardian
Dvorak Brings Expertise in Physical, Chemical Treatment Processes to UNL
Nebraska Water News
Festival of Color to Stress Water Quality
Missouri River Again On Endangered List
CNPP&ID Honored
Crypto Video Out
ARDC to Open House with Symposium
No New Surface Water Rights: Legislature Puts Moratorium on Water Appropriations
Issues and Alternatives, Two Publications Analyze Federal Water Legislation
Water Current, Volume 27, No. 3, June 1995
Water Current, Volume 27, No. 3, June 1995
Water Current Newsletter
Researchers Seek to Clean Up Hazardous Legacy of Bomb Production
From the Director: Annual Water Resources Tour Promises On-Site Education
Deep Soil Probing
Nebraska Water News
UNL Faculty Receive USGS Grants
Niobrara Study Out
Bookmarks Produced
Publication on BMPs for Wheat Available
Task Force Issues Recommendations
Festivals Effective
More and More Producers Recycle Pesticide Containers
Water Tour to Explore Central Nebraska
Riparian Habitats Of The Central Platte As A Corridor For Dispersal Of Small Mammals In Nebraska, Thomas D. Silvia
Riparian Habitats Of The Central Platte As A Corridor For Dispersal Of Small Mammals In Nebraska, Thomas D. Silvia
School of Natural Resources: Dissertations, Theses, and Student Research
No abstract provided.
Application And Evaluation Of A Biotic Index To Sand Hills And Streams Of Nebraska, Gregory T. Michl
Application And Evaluation Of A Biotic Index To Sand Hills And Streams Of Nebraska, Gregory T. Michl
School of Natural Resources: Dissertations, Theses, and Student Research
No abstract provided.
Geology Of The Ogallala/High Plains Regional Aquifer System In Nebraska, Robert F. Diffendal Jr.
Geology Of The Ogallala/High Plains Regional Aquifer System In Nebraska, Robert F. Diffendal Jr.
School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications
This guide is mostly figures with a reference section containing some of the pertinent literature on the Cenozoic geology we will see over the next four days. Copies of some of the cited works will be assembled in a packet and handed out on the morning of April 29th. We will make all 17 stops. if the weather is reasonably good and the roads are passable. On the first day, April 29, we will try to get to stops 1-5, the more distal parts of the Ogallala and younger deposits in Nebraska. On April 30, we will try to visit …
Water Current, Volume 27, No. 2, April 1995
Water Current, Volume 27, No. 2, April 1995
Water Current Newsletter
Conference Brings Water Officials, Splash of Expertise to Debate
From the Director: Funding for Water Resources Research Institutes Threatened
New Lake Manual Readable, Practical
Platte Watershed Program
Research Review: Sprinkler Irrigatin: A Volatile Organic Compound Remediation Alternative
Nebraska Water News
Pesticide Applicator Manuals on the Web
Nebaskan Named NACD Director
Faculty Receive Extension Grants
Awards Honor Group, Individuals for Service
Mathiason Appointed
Sprinkler Irrigation: A Volatile Organic Compound Remediation Alternative, Roy F. Spalding, Mark E. Burbach, Mary Exner Spalding, Leyla Parra-Vicary, Dennis R. Alexander
Sprinkler Irrigation: A Volatile Organic Compound Remediation Alternative, Roy F. Spalding, Mark E. Burbach, Mary Exner Spalding, Leyla Parra-Vicary, Dennis R. Alexander
Nebraska Water Center: Faculty Publications
Sprinkler irrigation has the potential not only to cheaply and effectively remove volatile organic compounds (VOCs) from contaminated ground water but also use the water beneficially and eliminate the costly disposal of both the remediated water and the contaminants. Removal of VOCs from water involves volatilization, which releases the VOCs from the liquid phase to the gaseous phase.
A conventionally designed sprinkler irrigation system was tested near Hastings, Nebraska, to assess its efficacy for removing VOCs in pumped ground water. VOCs in the ground water include 7,1,2-trichloroethylene( TCE), ethylene dibromide (EDB), 1,1,1-trichloroethane (TCA), and carbon tetrachloride (CT). Factors possibly influencing …
Water Current, Volume 27, No. 1, February 1995
Water Current, Volume 27, No. 1, February 1995
Water Current Newsletter
Nonpoint Source Contamination: EPA Official Identifies Roadblocks to Successful NPS Management
From the Director: NSF Grant to Allow Launch of Statewide Science Program
NPS Pollution Management May Change
Stork Named to Water Council Position
Clean Water Act
Thoughts on Water: Winning Entries of the Water Current Nebraska High School Essay Contest
New Video Shows How to Sample Water
Annual Water Conference Deadline Near
Sheffield Receives Headgate Award
Planning for a Sustainable Future: The Case of the North American Great Plains
North Central Region: Water Quality Project Workshop
Impact Of Erosion, Mass Wasting, And Sedimentation On Human Activities In The Río Grande Basin, Jujuy Province, Argentina, Waldo Chayle, William J. Wayne
Impact Of Erosion, Mass Wasting, And Sedimentation On Human Activities In The Río Grande Basin, Jujuy Province, Argentina, Waldo Chayle, William J. Wayne
Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences: Faculty Publications
Nearly all dry mountainous regions are affected by severe erosion, floods, and debris flows during times of intense precipitation. The lithology, geologic structure, and climate in Jujuy Province, Argentina combine to place at serious risk the people who live along the Río Grande, the major river that drains the east side of the Cordillera Oriental and the west side of the Sierras Subandinas. Nearly all precipitation falls during summer (January–March) with little during the remainder of the year; most of the basin is semiarid to arid, although the southern end has a humid subtropical climate. Relief is great, as much …
Avian Use Of Field Windbreaks, Herbaceous Fencerows And Associated Cropfields In East Central Nebraska, Natalie J. Sunderman
Avian Use Of Field Windbreaks, Herbaceous Fencerows And Associated Cropfields In East Central Nebraska, Natalie J. Sunderman
School of Natural Resources: Dissertations, Theses, and Student Research
No abstract provided.
Avian Use Of Riparian Corridors And Adjacent Cropland In East-Central Nebraska, Rebecca L. Fitzmaurice
Avian Use Of Riparian Corridors And Adjacent Cropland In East-Central Nebraska, Rebecca L. Fitzmaurice
School of Natural Resources: Dissertations, Theses, and Student Research
No abstract provided.
1995 Platte River Basin Ecosystem Symposium Proceedings
1995 Platte River Basin Ecosystem Symposium Proceedings
Water Current Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Relating United States Crop Land Use To Natural Resources And Climate Change, K. G. Hubbard, F. J. Flores-Mendoza
Relating United States Crop Land Use To Natural Resources And Climate Change, K. G. Hubbard, F. J. Flores-Mendoza
Drought Mitigation Center: Faculty Publications
Crop production depends not only on the yield but also on the area harvested. The yield response to climate change has been widely examined, but the sensitivity of crop land use to hypothetical climate change has not been examined directly. Crop land-use regression models for estimating crop area indices (CAIs) - the percent of land used for corn, soybean, wheat, and sorghum production - are presented. Inputs to the models include available water-holding capacity of the soil, percent of land available for rain-fed agricultural production, annual precipitation, and annual temperature. The total variance of CAI explained by the models ranged …