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Dust Erosion Following Wildfires and Drought

Dates

date type
2011-01-01
Start Date
2011-01-01
End Date
2014-01-01

Citation

US Geological Survey(Fiscal Agent), US Forest Service(Collaborator), Randy Foltz(Collaborator), US Geological Survey(Principal Investigator), Matt Germino(Principal Investigator), Peter Robichaud(Collaborator), Natalie Wagenbrenner(Collaborator), Washington State University(Collaborator), Brian Lamb(Collaborator), Dust Erosion Following Wildfires and Drought, http://mmheller.github.io/GNLCC_PTS4_NPLCC/prj_report.html?PRJ_ID=455

Summary

FY2011Increasingly large wildfires in the Great Basin and Columbia Plateau have led to large dust storms in areas historically without them. Large dust storms have adversely affected human health, energy production operations, soil fertility, and mountain snowpack hydrology. USGS research efforts have investigated the causes and consequences of post-fire dust storms. Publications from this work are being used by managers with the Bureau of Land Management, Department of Energy, and other land managers to develop management practices that will minimize dust production.

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md_metadata.json 25.45 KB application/json
metadata_iso1.xml 119.73 KB application/vnd.iso.19139-1+xml

Material Request Instructions

Great Basin Landscape Conservation Cooperative(Distributor - Download products as needed from the Sciencebase.gov URL provided)

Purpose

Data Acquisition and Development Vulnerability Assessment Federal resource managers State agencies Academics & scientific researchers

Project Extension

projectStatusCompleted

Budget Extension

annualBudgets
year2011
fundingSources
amount20000.0
recipientUS Geological Survey
sourceUS Geological Survey
totalFunds20000.0
totalFunds20000.0

Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
lcc:gb lcc:gb 455

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