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Edwards Aquifer Region Stakeholder Frame Analysis

Papers in Applied Geography, 2015
ABSTRACTThe 2011 drought was the worst single-year climatic occurrence in Texas's recorded history (Texas AgriLife Extension Service 2011). Texas must meet residential and economic development requirements of a population that will nearly double over the next fifty years and will require dramatic improvements in water conservation and reuse. Located in
Richard A Earl
exaly   +2 more sources

Full‐Bayesian Inversion of the Edwards Aquifer

Groundwater, 2004
Abstract The Bayesian inverse approach proposed by is extended to estimate the transmissivity fields of highly heterogeneous aquifers for steady state ground water flow. Boundary conditions are Dirichlet and Neumann type, and sink and source terms are included.
Yefang, Jiang   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Aquifer storage and recovery in the Edwards Aquifers, Texas

2019
ABSTRACT Aquifer storage and recovery (ASR) is a proven water-supply strategy that uses an aquifer to store surplus water that will be available for later use when that stored water is needed. Although only three ASR systems are currently operating in Texas, recent incentives from the state, along with changes in regulatory framework ...
Neil E. Deeds, Fred Blumberg
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Hydrologic Overview of the Edwards/Trinity Aquifers

Symposium on the Application of Geophysics to Engineering and Environmental Problems 2003, 2003
The Edwards aquifer is the water supply source for the 1 million plus people that live in the City of San Antonio and the six counties east and west of the City. The aquifer has been designated a sole-source aquifer by the EPA. The aquifer also supplies water to a major agriculture community for irrigation as well as recreation around the major springs
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Multilevel monitoring of the Edwards and Trinity Aquifers

2019
ABSTRACT Multiport monitor wells have been used by the Barton Springs/Edwards Aquifer Conservation District (BSEACD) to study complex, multilayer, and stacked aquifers in central Texas. Much of the data from water wells that are used for hydrogeological studies are of limited use owing to the thickness of the aquifers, vertical variation
Brian A. Smith, Brian B. Hunt
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