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MARK YOUR CALENDAR- DON'T MISS THIS CONGRESS!
About the Conference
» Online Registration Open
» An Invitation to Attend (pdf)
The 2005 Watershed Management Conference, "Managing
Watersheds for Human and Natural Impacts:
Engineering, Ecological, and Economic
Challenges" is sponsored by the Environmental
and Water Resources Institute (EWRI) of the
American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE).
This will be the ninth in a series of specialty
conferences focused on watershed
management. The conference was first held
in Billings, Montana, in 1965 and has been
repeated every five years since. This year's
conference will be held east of the Mississippi
River, where the problems and challenges of
urbanization and sprawl are particularly acute.
Urbanization and land use change are pressing concerns
throughout the U.S. as well as other parts of the world.
In addition to the traditional challenges of meeting water
quantity and quality regulations and flood mitigation
requirements, today's hydrologic engineers and watershed
mangers must also contend with managing for sensitive
species, the arrival of new water-borne diseases such as
the West Nile virus, and increasingly complex regulations
(e.g., TMDL's).
This conference will bring together a
diverse group of attendees, each with
a critical stake in watershed
management. Topics ranging in
scope from state-of-the-art
computer modeling, to field
monitoring, to watershed
science, to governmental
policy and regulation all have
a home at Watershed
Management 2005. Individuals
spanning just as broad a scope —
engineers, hydrologists, biologists,
ecologists, economists, attorneys, public
officials, and governmental planners among them — are
expected and encouraged to attend. As with past Watershed Management symposia, we especially
encourage presentations from international
professionals and experts whose unique
perspective is central to the goals of this
meeting.
Please join us July 19-22, 2005, in
Williamsburg, Virginia, and continue the
tradition of the eight previous Watershed
Management conferences.
Conference Topics
- Stream and Watershed Restoration, Constructed Wetlands,
and Best Management Practices
- Modeling and Monitoring of Hydrologic Processes:
Rainfall-Runoff, Snowmelt, ET, Infiltration, and Other
Phenomena
- Effects of Fire and Post-Fire Mitigation on Watershed
Hydrology
- Managing Watersheds for Control of Ecological Impacts
- Groundwater: Competing Demands,
Contamination, Recharge, Mining, Salt
Water Intrusion, and Other Challenges
- The Economics of Watershed
Management: Government Policy and
Smart Growth
- Managing Forested Watersheds: Roads,
Fish Habitat, Stochastic Disturbances, and
Other Challenges
PRE-CONFERENCE WORKSHOPS
Tuesday, July 19, 9:00 am - 5:00 pm
Use the conference registration form to register for either of these two pre-conference workshops. The course fee is $250 for either workshop; save $50 by registering before June 21. The fee includes lunch, coffee breaks, and all course materials.
Treatment of Uncertainty in Water Resource Modeling and Analysis
Presenter: Srikanta Mishra, Ph.D., Senior Engineer and Project Manager for Intera Inc., Austin, Texas, and Adjunct Professor at the University of Texas at Austin
Srikanta Mishra, Ph.D., Senior Engineer and Project Manager for Intera Inc., Austin, Texas, and Adjunct Professor at the University of Texas at Austin
Scientists and engineers dealing with water resources are often confronted with uncertainty caused by incomplete knowledge and/or natural randomness. Traditional deterministic modeling of uncertainty in water resource models often involves the use of best guess or worstcase assumptions about model inputs to quantify their impacts on model predictions. Alternatively, a set of optimistic and pessimistic values is sometimes utilized to provide upside and downside forecasts around a reference scenario.
Recently, there has been greater interest in the use of probabilistic uncertainty analysis methods, which allow a better definition of the range of likely outcomes and the likelihood of each outcome. This workshop will provide an introduction to several such methodologies including Monte Carlo simulation, analytical error propagation techniques, and probability/logic tree analysis method.
Curve Number Rainfall-Runoff: Professional Application
Presenters: Richard H. Hawkins, Professor of Watershed Resources, University of Arizona, and Donald E. Woodward, Natural Resources Conservation Service (retired)
Richard H. Hawkins, Professor of Watershed Resources, University of Arizona, and Donald E. Woodward, Natural Resources Conservation Service (retired)
The Curve Number method is widely used in applied hydrology and environmental impact analysis. Because of its authority, unique technological niche, and transparency, it is the premiere technique for converting event rainfall into direct runoff. It finds wide application in rainfall response for ungaged watersheds, and as a process component in continuous models. It is however, incompletely understood, often misused or misapplied, and realizations for application and developments beyond the original handbook are not generally appreciated. This short course will provide an open factual background on the Curve Number Method: origins and assumption, limits of applications, and recent findings, leading to more informed professional application of the method. Its role in understanding general rainfall-runoff hydrology will be explored and discussed. The workshop includes active, open discussion with peers and the presenters.
Conference Format
The four-day conference will include a plenary session,
technical sessions, poster sessions, workshops, trade
exhibits, technical, and several networking events.
Proceedings will be provided onsite at the conference.
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