Katharine «Katie» Nightingale, 53, works
as a hydrogeologist, is an incumbent member of the town board, and will be on the ballot as an independent candidate listed under the party line «Johnsburg Hamlets United.»
After 5 years
as a hydrogeologist, he says: «It's going well.
She worked
as a hydrogeologist in New Mexico and West Texas until moving to Alpine, Texas in 2006.
Not exact matches
So,
as part of an initiative by the Geological Survey of Israel to study the Dead Sea region, Imri Oz, a
hydrogeologist currently at Technion - Israel Institute of Technology in Haifa, and his colleagues built their own version of the Dead Sea.
Hydrogeologists estimate that the part of the Earth that holds water stretches almost
as deep beneath our feet.
The research by
hydrogeologists at The University of Texas at Austin, which appears in the May 11 edition of the journal Nature Geoscience, shows for the first time that virtually every drop of water coursing through 311,000 miles (500,000 kilometers) of waterways in the Mississippi River network goes through a natural filtering process
as it flows to the Gulf of Mexico.
In the realm of research, academic
hydrogeologists are broadening their time horizons to help forecast and mitigate the effects of climate change, and they're stretching the traditional boundaries of their field to explore questions such
as how groundwater interacts with the surface water of lakes and rivers.
Of the 15
hydrogeologists in the Denver office where Zeiler works, only three have Ph.D. s. That's typical of the field
as a whole: AGI estimates that university programs graduate five times
as many M.S. students
as Ph.D. s. Its figures show that about 18,000 hydrologists and
hydrogeologists now work in the environmental industry, a few thousand in the mining and petroleum industries, and about 850 in academia, the only sector for which a doctorate is required.
But
hydrogeologists say a strong undercurrent of environmental idealism pervades the field
as well.
But
as Miami poured nearly half a billion gallons of partly treated sewage into the ground each day from the late 1980s through the mid 1990s,
hydrogeologists learned that the earth — and the flow of fluids through it — wasn't
as uniform
as the models depicted.
The target readers for this publication are hydrologists,
hydrogeologists and isotope experts dealing with catchment hydrology and management of water resources,
as well
as technical cooperation project counterparts in Member States.
As a kayaker and
hydrogeologist, I always felt that the concept of standing waves, eddies and whirlpools in a river system was a good example of spatio - temporal chaos and if you hadn't used the example, I would have pointed it out here.
I started lecturing at Keele in 2004 following a period of time working
as a Geologist /
Hydrogeologist with an environmental consultancy, working primarily in the area of landfill site management, contaminated land remediation and human health risk assessment.