Sentences with phrase «says hydrogeologist»

«I would argue that [more than] 10,000 data points really tell a better story,» says hydrogeologist Donald Siegel of Syracuse University in New York, whose team published the new study online this month in Environmental Science & Technology.

Not exact matches

No matter where the young water comes from, the new technique for identifying the percentage of fossil groundwater in a well could be an important tool for communities, says Audrey Sawyer, a hydrogeologist at Ohio State University in Columbus.
«This freshwater is right underfoot, flowing around leaky gas and septic tanks,» says Audrey Sawyer, a hydrogeologist at The Ohio State University, Columbus, who led the study.
«Erosion gets [excess] material out, but doesn't make the shape,» says Jiri Bruthans, a hydrogeologist at Charles University in Prague, who led the research.
Even though there is no natural cement binding the sand grains into rock, mining it requires blasting at the sandstone's face to break the sand loose, says Alan Mayo, a hydrogeologist at Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah, and a co-author of the study.
«More and more, hydrogeologists are no longer working alone,» says John Wilson, a hydrology professor at the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology in Socorro.
«I can't think of any unemployed hydrogeologistssays Roy Haggerty, an associate professor of hydrogeology at Oregon State University, Corvallis.
After 5 years as a hydrogeologist, he says: «It's going well.
But hydrogeologists say a strong undercurrent of environmental idealism pervades the field as well.
«The company did a great job bringing in experts from all over the world to evaluate what they were doing,» Stanford University hydrogeologist Sally Benson says.
«There is no certainty at all in any of this, and whoever tells you the opposite is not telling you the truth,» said Stefan Finsterle, a leading hydrogeologist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory who specializes in understanding the properties of rock layers and modeling how fluid flows through them.
Thomas Homer - Dixon Trudeau Center for Peace and Conflict Studies, University of Toronto Feng Hsu Goddard Space Flight Center, NASA Mark Jacobson Civil and Environmental Engineering, Stanford University David Keith Institute for Sustainable Energy, Environment and Economy, University of Calgary Geoffrey Landis Glenn Research Center, NASA Jane C. S. Long hydrogeologist and geotechnical engineer Michael MacCracken Climate Institute, Washington, DC John C. Mankins Sunsat Energy Council / Managed Energy Technologies Michael E. Mann Earth System Science Center, Pennsylvania State University Gregg Marland International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis Mark Nelson Institute of Ecotechnics, Santa Fe, NM Darel Preble Space Solar Power Institute, Georgia Institute of Technology Gregory H. Rau Institute of Marine Sciences, University of California, Santa Cruz Steve Rayner Said Business School, Oxford, UK Kim Stanley Robinson Author, «Forty Signs of Rain» Gregory Dennis Sachs Alternative Power Program, US Merchant Marine Academy Thomas Schelling (Nobel laureate) Department of Economics, University of Maryland Michael Schlesinger Atmospheric Sciences, University of Illinois, Urbana - Champaign Steven E. Schwartz Brookhaven National Laboratory, Department of Energy John Turner National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Department of Energy Tyler Volk Department of Biology, New York University Tom M. L. Wigley National Center for Atmospheric Research Steven C. Wofsy School of Engineering and Applied Science / Department of Earth and Planetary Science, Harvard University Lowell Wood Hoover Institution / Stanford University
One of our favourite quotes in 2017 came from a hydrogeologist who pointed out, referring to the problems with water wells in Chatham - Kent, if you have a model that says you're not going to have problems, then you experience problems, then it's the model that is wrong.
Another problem is that the study does not take into account the increasing difficulty of pumping water from depleted aquifers, said Leonard Konikow, a hydrogeologist at the U.S. Geological Survey's office in Reston, Virginia.
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