Provided in the articles ‘‘River Plan Too Fishy for my Taste Buds’’ by Bill McEwen and ‘‘River Restoration Project Offers a Sprinkling of Hope’’ by Daniel Weintraub give demonstrations of pros and cons for a $400 million dollar project to restore the San Joaquin River Restoration (SJRR). I feel that this project stands as a waste of money for a cause expected to fail. Using Bill McEwen’s article, an ethos argument consists of several experts on the matter and famous institutions reported the impossibility of its success, for the logos side of the matter, a number of studies prove the downfall of this project, and for a pathos, the local farmers lose water for their crops due to this project. The article ‘‘River Plan Too Fishy for my Taste Buds’’ published in the Fresno Bee occupies Fresno, California. Robert McEwen, a writer at the Fresno Bee for 35 years, attended Fresno High School and Fresno State.…
The river restoration project created to restore the San Joaquin river to its former glory, therefore It should help the salmon instead of the farmers as Daniel Weintraub explains in his article River Restoration Project Offers a Sprinkling of Hope I agree with Weintraub I believe that the river restoration project should continue for the salmon because the environment has a greater significance than some farmers losing their jobs farmers. I agree with Weintraub because he’s very credible he has been working for the Sacramento bee for fifteen years and has twenty-two years in politics. Weintraub’s article published by the Sacramento bee most of the readers includes middle and upper-class people and as for Sacramento it is the capital city of…
Firstly, the author describes the erosion, siltation, and water diversions of the Colorado River. Then People began to build the Hoover Dam. There are two different viewpoints. Some conservationists believe that there were many mistakes that human made from Colorado River, so people should stop dam construction. It is in contrast to the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation.…
The current problem in Jaffrey is that, recently Jaffrey residents have noticed that Jaffrey Lake, which used to be clean, and a great place to swim, has changed. Slimy, green algae floats on the surface, and the water has turned very dirty. People are finding dead fish on the shore, and everyone is afraid they'll get sick if they swim in the lake. This is a major problem because, people around the lake will slowly start getting sick and one day the all the fish and plants in this water will die because the water is very very dirty. I was hired to test the water to determine the levels of Nitrates and Phosphates in this lake.…
In this lab, students will be touring the Glen Canyon Dam and the Colorado River. Students will use the field trip as a reference to provide a summary of the Glen Canyon Dam’s operation. Students will also determine the channel and stream forming characteristics as well as describe the outflow by the dam and the streamflow. 2. Project Description…
Problem What is the aquatic health of the Nequasset lake tributaries as analyzed through chemical and biological parameters as well as physical habitat assessment? What factors, both natural and human-influenced, contribute (positively or negatively) to the health of the Nequasset lake tributaries? Background Information Weather or not we realize it, as people that (presumably) live in the Bath area, the streams that flow into Nequasset are very important to our survival. They are numerous, and flow all over Southern Maine to feed into Nequasset, the lake that supplies our water.…
California’s San Joaquin River was a source of life. It helped provide food for thousands and was a home for many, but the Bureau of Reclamation took it all away when they ordered the construction of the Friant Dam. The Dam wasn’t created to destroy life, but to give life. It helped southern Californians get the water they needed by diverting the river into an aqueduct and sending it south. But what many didn’t predict was the mass die off of many fish that once lived in the San Joaquin.…
Did Salmon Rule? Enquiring when intensive storage and sedentism began on the Northwest Coast Introduction Background Namu, located in the traditional territory of the Heiltsuk Nation on the central coast of British Columbia is an archaeological obscurity, as no one can be sure of the actual time frame of intensive storage and sedimentation occurrences. On the Northwest Coast "salmon remains, the representation of cranial elements versus vertebrae, mass capture technology and storage structures are being debated as evidence for large-scale salmon storage" (Cannon and Yang, 2006). The use of this knowledge is to acquire sustainable information of when the sedentism and storage actually began.…
About a million salmon died every year after the opening of the Grand Coulee Dam. At the time the Colville Indians ate about 1 ⅓ pounds of fish every day. The Grand Coulee dam removed about 1,100 miles of salmon's natural spawning habitat.…
The extent of the fish and the pristine rivulet connote a solid riparian living space when news about the steep decrease of California's once inexhaustible salmon populace was spreading around the state. Pressure driven mining, agribusiness, urban improvement, and the expansion of dams destroyed numerous watersheds that managed salmon and other untamed life. In Brookes' opportunity, as today, salmon were symbols of the wellbeing of California's stream frameworks. A few of the state's salmon species are presently on the precarious…
Retrieved November 27, 2017, from https://www.epa.gov/climate-indicators/great-lakes Climate Change, Health, Environmental Justice [PDF]. (n.d.). United States Environmental Protection…
Currently, the levels of the lake leave a ‘bathtub ring’ and are unwaveringly dropping day by day; if these conditions persist, nearby water will no longer be easily accessible to surrounding states, and the dam’s hydroelectricity production will be cut off from approximately 29 million American people…
Construction of dams alter flow regimes and flow rates and prevents anadromous salmon from reaching spawning…
The tribes had felt Washington had been violating the treaties by installing culverts that do not allow salmon to move freely up streams to spawning grounds. Our salmon develop in freshwater, making a journey out to sea, returning to freshwater to lay and fertilize eggs. The life cycle of salmon has been occurring for thousands of years. Salmon are a living link to our ecosystem and our future.…
The fourth and final theory that I will be explaining deals with worldwide climate change. Global climate change is a hot button issue for many political and special interest groups and some scientists believe that it may be at the root of the King Salmon’s disappearance. Despite its relative sensitivity, when compared to other theories about the salmon crisis, it is accepted by almost all that it is a happening. Regardless of what side of the political aisle you fall on, it is simply factual that the climate is changing.…