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
Hauptverfasser: BACH, DOUG, SEAR, TOM
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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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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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