3 edition of The effects of the 1988 drought on water resources in Wisconsin found in the catalog.
The effects of the 1988 drought on water resources in Wisconsin
B. K. Holmstrom
Published
1990 by U.S. Geological Survey in [Reston, Va.] .
Written in English
Edition Notes
Series | Water fact sheet, Open-file report -- 90-149., U.S. Geological Survey open-file report -- 90-149. |
Contributions | Ellefson, B. R., Geological Survey (U.S.) |
The Physical Object | |
---|---|
Format | Microform |
Pagination | 1 sheet |
ID Numbers | |
Open Library | OL17675411M |
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@article{osti_, title = {Effects of the drought on water resources in Wisconsin}, author = {Holmstrom, B.K. and Ellefson, B.R.}, abstractNote = {The drought was one of the most severe droughts since weather records have been kept in Wisconsin; precipitation in Wisconsin was below normal in most areas during the calendar year.
THE EFFECTS OF THE DROUGHT ON WATER RESOURCES IN WISCONSIN INTRODUCTION The drought was one of the most severe droughts since weather records have been kept in Wisconsin.
This fact sheet describes the cause of the drought and its effects on the water resources, water use, and agriculture in the State. PRECIPITATION CALENDAR YEARCited by: 1.
Get this from a library. The effects of the drought on water resources in Wisconsin. [B K Holmstrom; B R Ellefson; Geological Survey (U.S.)].
GENERAL EFFECTS OF DROUGHT ON WATER RESOURCES OF THE SOUTHWEST By J. GATEWOOD, ALFONSO WILSON, H. THOMAS, and L.
KISTER ABSTRACT The effects of drought are most pronounced on soil moisture, because soil is the prime recipient of the water from precipita tion, and upon streamflow, because it is the residual water thatAuthor: J.S.
Gatewood, Alfonso Wilson, H.E. Thomas, L.R. Kister. Drought in Wisconsin from - The U.S. Drought Monitor started in Sincethe longest duration of drought (D1-D4) in Wisconsin lasted weeks beginning on Aug and ending on Septem A drought is a period of drier-than-normal conditions that results in water-related amount of precipitation at a particular location varies from year to year, but over a period of years, the average amount is fairly constant.
In the deserts of the Southwest, the average precipitation is less than 3 inches per year. In contrast, the average precipitation in the.
The effects of drought are most pronounced on soil moisture, because soil is the prime recipient of the water from precipitation, and upon streamflow, because it is the residual water that is not accepted by or that flows out from the soil and groundwater reservoirs.
Studies by statistical correlation of records of natural streamflow and of dendrochronology indicate patterns of regional runoff.
The Impact of the drought on Water Provision Presentation to the Western Cape Drought Dialogue in order to deal with drought occurrences, our water resources managers have developed very robust operating rules for all of to 85% in April (5 years)File Size: 3MB.