Colorado River

The Colorado River region of California is home to the Imperial Valley, the Coachella Valley, and the Palo Verde and Bard Valleys. This region is sometimes referred to as the “Winter Salad Bowl”, as the mild winters, good soil, and reliable water from the Colorado River allow a wide range of crops year-round, including grapes, dates, citrus, vegetables of all kinds, and numerous field crops as well as livestock. The Salton Sea is California’s largest inland lake and provides critical habitat for migratory birds in the Pacific Flyway.

Agricultural risks from changing snowmelt

Nature Portfolio (Springer Nature) | April 20th, 2020

Summary

Snowpack stores cold-season precipitation to meet warm-season water demand. Climate change threatens to disturb this balance by altering the fraction of precipita

An Assessment of Urban Water Demand Forecasts in California

Pacific Institute | August 5th, 2020

Summary

In California, urban per capita water demand has declined dramatically over the past several decades, driven in part by greater uptake of water-efficient devices. These r

An Evolutionary Theory of Administrative Law

Southern Methodist University | May 25th, 2018

Summary

Law evolves to accommodate change—this is axiomatic in most academic legal traditions. But in the era of the administrative state, with congressional gridlock and a jud

Analog Model Study of the Ground-Water Basin of the Upper Coachella Valley, California

U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) | July 18th, 1974

Summary

An analog model of the ground-water basin of the upper Coachella Valley was constructed to determine the effects of imported water on ground-water levels. The mod

Arsenic in California Drinking Water

Environmental Integrity Project | September 15th, 2016

Summary

More than three years after the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency found California in noncompliance with the federal Safe Drinking Water Act, 95 community water system

Arsenic, chromium, uranium, and vanadium in rock, alluvium, and groundwater, Mojave River and Morongo Areas, western Mojave Desert, southern California

U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) | October 16th, 2023

Summary

Trace elements within groundwater that originate from aquifer materials and pose potential public-health hazards if consumed are known as geogenic contaminants. The geoge

Arsenic, Chromium, Uranium, and Vanadium in Rock, Arsenic, Chromium, Uranium, and Vanadium in Rock, Alluvium, and Groundwater, Mojave River and Morongo Alluvium, and Groundwater, Mojave River and Morongo Areas, Western Mojave Desert, Southern California

U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) | October 16th, 2023

Summary

Trace elements within groundwater that originate from aquifer materials and pose potential public-health hazards if consumed are known as geogenic contaminants. The geoge

Assembly Bill 1337

State of California Office of Legislative Counsel | February 16th, 2023

Summary

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