Skip to main content
Advanced Search

Filters: Contacts: Gregory J. McCabe (X) > Categories: Project (X)

2 results (11ms)   

Filters
Date Range
Extensions
Types
Contacts
Tag Types
Tag Schemes
View Results as: JSON ATOM CSV
thumbnail
Understanding the changes in the distribution and quantity of, and demand for, water resources in response to a changing climate is essential to planning for, and adapting to, future climatic conditions. In order to plan for future conditions and challenges, it is crucial that managers understand the limitations and uncertainties associated with the characterization of these changes when making management decisions. Changes in consumptive water use (water removed without return to a water resources system) will change streamflow, impacting downstream water users, their livelihoods, as well as aquatic ecosystems. Historical changes in available water may be attributed to changes in precipitation; but these changes...
Climate displays an often-unrecognized order in both time and space. What may appear as a random sequence of precipitation at a point or within a watershed is actually the local expression of a broad integrated system of weather processes that are active on scales of 100’s to 1000’s of kilometers. Only when climate forcings and hydrologic responses are considered from a regional perspective does the order become evident. Understanding these regional processes provides a sound basis for national, regional, and local hydrologic analysis, resource management, and hazard assessment/mitigation. The objectives of this research are (1) to identify and quantify relations between large-scale atmospheric circulation and sea-surface...


    map background search result map search result map Assessing the Drivers of Water Availability for Historic and Future Conditions in the South Central U.S. Assessing the Drivers of Water Availability for Historic and Future Conditions in the South Central U.S.