Environmental Rehabilitation and Flood Management at Underwood Creek
Sometimes improving environmental conditions means undoing the well-intentioned actions of the past. Such was the challenge faced by the Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage District (MMSD) in rehabilitating a 6,600-ft segment of Underwood Creek, an urbanized tributary stream to the Menomonee River, one...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Military engineer 2012-02, Vol.104 (675), p.44-46 |
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container_title | The Military engineer |
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creator | BACH, DOUG SEAR, TOM |
description | Sometimes improving environmental conditions means undoing the well-intentioned actions of the past. Such was the challenge faced by the Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage District (MMSD) in rehabilitating a 6,600-ft segment of Underwood Creek, an urbanized tributary stream to the Menomonee River, one of three rivers that combine in Milwaukee before discharging into Lake Michigan. |
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Such was the challenge faced by the Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage District (MMSD) in rehabilitating a 6,600-ft segment of Underwood Creek, an urbanized tributary stream to the Menomonee River, one of three rivers that combine in Milwaukee before discharging into Lake Michigan.</abstract><pub>Society of American Military Engineers (SAME)</pub><tpages>3</tpages></addata></record> |
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source | Jstor Complete Legacy |
subjects | Aquatic habitats Creeks Discharge Environmental engineering Flood management Floodplains Freshwater Geotechnical engineering Groundwater Military Military engineering Rehabilitation Rivers Segments Soil water Streams Tributaries Wetlands Wildlife habitats |
title | Environmental Rehabilitation and Flood Management at Underwood Creek |
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