A team of UW Civil Engineering graduate students install a eddy-correlation flux tower at the foot of the Big Horn mountains as part of a study to develop an improved groundwater recharge estimation strategy for Wyoming's coal bed methane basins (P.I.
Fred Ogden).
M.S. student measures changes in flow velocity and water depth
to identify the effectiveness of dilute polyacrylamide as a canal
sealant (P.I. Mike Urynowicz).
A team of U.W. researchers from the Departments of Civil &
Architectural Engineering and Geology perform ground penetrating radar
measurements of ice thickness on the Dinwoody Glacier in Wyoming (P.I.
Glenn Tootle).
M.S. student cores an old growth tree in the Wind River range
of Wyoming as part of a paleohydrologic study aimed at determining
the history and future for Wyoming's glaciers (P.I. Glenn Tootle).
Student adjusting the flocculation unit of the 5 gpm pilot scale treatment plant used to simulate water treatment processes.
Students surveying Big Laramie River channel geometry as part of stream bank stabilization monitoring and assessment activities
Student pressure testing hollow fiber membrane modules in water. Ted's MS thesis research involves characterizing dissolved gases and water vapor transfer through membranes under high hydrostatic pressures.