Abstract
- Runkel, Robert L 11 U.S. Geological SurveyAcid Mine Drainage (AMD) from abandoned mine lands contaminates streams and rivers throughout the Colorado Mineral Belt. Much of this contamination has persisted for decades and is likely to
- Rue, Garrett P 1 ; McKnight, Diane M 2 ; Gabor, Rachel 3 ; Anderson, Suzanne P 41 INSTAAR, ENVS; University of Colorado-Boulder2 INSTAAR, CEAE, ENVS; University of Colorado-Boulder3
- Raleigh, Mark S. 1 ; Deems, Jeffrey S. 21 CU / CIRES / NSIDC2 CU / CIRES/ NSIDCIn the mountainous western United States, operational runoff forecasting centers typically use streamflow observations to calibrate snow
- Painter, Thomas H. 11 Jet Propulsion Laboratory/California Institute of TechnologySnow cover and its melt dominate regional climate and water resources in the world’s mountainous regions, providing for critical agricultural and sustaining
- Khan, Alia 1 ; Jaffe, Rudolf 2 ; Ding, Yan 3 ; McKnight, Diane 41 CU-Boulder/INSTAAR2 Florida International University 3 Florida International University4 CU-Boulder/
- Kasprzyk, Joseph 11 University of Colorado BoulderIn environmental planning problems, decision makers' goals often fundamentally conflict. Faced with limited budgets, planners realize that increasing their systems' performance could cause
- Hill, Alice F 11 CU-BoulderRemote mountain rivers are increasingly under development threat as the low hanging fruit of hydropower dam sites -- ones with easy access and whose rivers have large head potential -- have been picked. Often
- Henning, Steven 1 ; Ge, Shemin 21 University of Colorado Boulder2 University of Colorado BoulderIn September 2013, the Boulder Creek watershed (BCW) was severely affected by a 1000-year precipitation event when 17
- Gray, Harrison J 11 University of Colorado - BoulderObtaining quantitative sediment transport information, such as transport rates, virtual velocity, and characteristic scales, is an important goal of the hydrologic and geomorphic sciences
- Evans, Sarah 1 ; Ge, Shemin 21 University of Colorado Boulder2 University of Colorado BoulderIn mountainous regions, warmer air temperatures have led to an earlier onset of spring snowmelt and lower snowmelt rates