Here are additional supporting documents for the water availability technical committee to consider:
- Tracking U.S. groundwater. Alley.
- It is the discharge. Bredehoeft.
- Safe yield and the water budget myth. Bredehoeft.
- Groundwater: the water-budget myth. Bredehoeft et al.
- The ecological significance of exchange processes between rivers and groundwater. Brunke & Gonser.
- Perspectives on water quantity issues in ethanol production. Collins.
- Hydrology prior to wetland and prairie restoration in and around the Glacier Ridge National Wildlife Refuge, Northwestern Minnesota. Cowdery et al.
- Nature's economy and the human economy. Ehrlich & Ehrlich.
- Mapping recharge from space: roadmap to meeting the grand challenge. Entekhabi & Moghaddam.
- Water and sustainability: A reappraisal. Falkenmark.
- The new blue and green water paradigm: Breaking new ground for water resources planning and management. Falkenmark and Rockstrom.
- Water and watersheds research: Discovery and broader impacts. Firth et al.
- On quantifying freshwater sustainability through multiscale mapping. Gordon.
- Water budgets: Foundations for effective water-resources and environmental management. Healy et al.
- Applying the concept of sustainability to water resource management. Heintz.
- Science and technology for sustainable well-being. Holdren.
- A new conceptual framework for sustainable development. Jabareen.
- Quantifying freshwater sustainability through multiscale mapping. Kanivetsky & Shmagin.
- Water resources sustainability: An ecological economics approach. Lant.
- Estimation of groundwater recharge using water balance coupled with base-flow-record estimation and stable-base-flow analysis. Lee et al.
- Hydropedology: Synergistic integration of pedology and hydrology. Lin et al.
- Ehancing water cycle measurements for future hydrologic research. Loescher et al.
- Defining and managing sustainable yield. Maimone.
- Moving beyond heterogeneity and process complexity: A new vision for watershed hydrology. McDonnell et al.
- Integrating multiscale observations of U.S. waters. National Academy of Sciences publication.
- Discussion of papers. Neuzil.
- Water use and availability in Minnesota. O'Shea.
- Bridging river basin scales and process to assess human-climate impacts and the terrestrial hydrologic system. Reed et al.
- Ground-water availability in the United States. Reilly et al.
- Evaluation of the sustainability of water withdrawals in the U.S., 1995 to 2005. Roy et al.
- Water sustainability in the United States and cooling water requirements for power generation. Roy et al.
- Managing water-resources systems: why "safe yield" is not sustainable. Sophocleous
- Concluding comments on managing water-resources systems: why "safe yield" is not sustainable. Sophocleous
- The source of water derived from wells. Theis.
- Groundwater resources sustainability indicators. UNESCO.
- Catchment classification and hydrologic similarity. Wagener et al.
- Ground water and surface water a single resource. Winter et al.
- Landscape ecology, cross-disciplinarity, and sustainability science. Wu.
- Virtual water: An unfolding concept in integrated water resources management. Yang & Zehnder.
- Scale aspects of groundwater flow and transport systems. Zilj.
Creator
Minnesota Environmental Quality Board; Minnesota Environmental Quality Board. Water program; Water program
Publisher
Minnesota Environmental Quality Board
Publication Date
Counties
Minnesota
Document type(s)
Subjects
Rights
Public