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As published in Environmental Management. Authors include Margaret Kalcic, Linda Prokopy, Jane Frankenberger, and Indrajeet Chaubey.
Co-authored by Joseph DePinto of LimnoTech and Margaret Kalcic of the U-M Water Center, this proceedings document describes a regional Great Lakes SWAT Modeling workshop hosted by the Water Center in March 2014. SWAT, which stands for Soil Water Assessment Tool, is a powerful model that allows users to determine the impacts of land management practices on water, sediment, and nutrient yields in agricultural watersheds. It is used frequently to answer land management questions and to inform nonpoint source pollution control decisions in agricultural watersheds such as Western Lake Erie, Green Bay, and Saginaw Bay.
These animated videos created by David J. Schwab of the University of Michigan Water Center with support from the National Wildlife Federation show the wide extent to which an oil spill beneath the Straits of Mackinac could impact Great Lakes ecology, wildlife, and coastal communities. The U-M Water Center is a center of U-M's Graham Sustainability Institute.
These animated videos created by David J. Schwab of the University of Michigan Water Center with support from the National Wildlife Federation show the wide extent to which an oil spill beneath the Straits of Mackinac could impact Great Lakes ecology, wildlife, and coastal communities. The U-M Water Center is a center of U-M's Graham Sustainability Institute.
These animated videos created by David J. Schwab of the University of Michigan Water Center with support from the National Wildlife Federation show the wide extent to which an oil spill beneath the Straits of Mackinac could impact Great Lakes ecology, wildlife, and coastal communities. The U-M Water Center is a center of U-M's Graham Sustainability Institute.
These animated videos created by David J. Schwab of the University of Michigan Water Center with support from the National Wildlife Federation show the wide extent to which an oil spill beneath the Straits of Mackinac could impact Great Lakes ecology, wildlife, and coastal communities. The U-M Water Center is a center of U-M's Graham Sustainability Institute.
These animated videos created by David J. Schwab of the University of Michigan Water Center with support from the National Wildlife Federation show the wide extent to which an oil spill beneath the Straits of Mackinac could impact Great Lakes ecology, wildlife, and coastal communities. The U-M Water Center is a center of U-M's Graham Sustainability Institute.
These animated videos created by David J. Schwab of the University of Michigan Water Center with support from the National Wildlife Federation show the wide extent to which an oil spill beneath the Straits of Mackinac could impact Great Lakes ecology, wildlife, and coastal communities. The U-M Water Center is a center of U-M's Graham Sustainability Institute.
An analysis of surface water impacts and ecological concerns related to hydraulic fracturing.
David J. Schwab, Ph.D., U-M Water Center
With support from the National Wildlife Federation, this eight-page report examines the wide extent to which an oil spill beneath the Straits of Mackinac could impact Great Lakes ecology, wildlife, and coastal communities. Animated videos of potential flow patterns are available on the Graham Institute's YouTube page.