Mission Viejo is a dazzling neighborhood in the Southern Orange County. It was called the most secured plays in California, and it became the safest city in USA in 2006. Mission Viejo is ornamented with the grace of Pristine Valley, Saddleback Mountains, and famous malls like Kaleidoscope. The citizens in this community are amiable and sympathetic which becomes the dignity of Mission Viejo. To keep the safety in check, cops always communicate with schools, students, and children in a friendly manner. Mission Viejo also holds a Pro-life animal house, which has been pursuing in here for about 20 years. Mission Viejo movers aid you to enter into this city.…
This paper portrays the formation, development, and possible solution of the tri-state water crisis between Alabama, Florida, and Georgia. To do so, it focuses first on the claims of each state along with a brief explanation of each states’ riparian claim to the Apalachicola-Chattahoochee-Flint (ACF) and Alabama-Coosa-Tallapoosa (ATF) Basins as this is a necessary basis of understanding in order to see why stakeholders took the steps that they did and to grasp the gravity of the situation. From here, the focus moves more towards Atlanta, as the citizens there had the most at stake during this dispute. Next, a history of the dispute is outlined, beginning with the reasons for constructing the Buford dam, and continuing through last recommendations from the United States Army Corps of Engineers. The historical section provides basic facts to support the decisions made by different courts and reveals the logics of how these decisions were made. In conclusion, the paper outlines current conditions and recommendations for addressing the tri-state water crisis.…
With the development of the Yuma Project, developers and residents experienced a lot of changes and obstacles. With the partnership of the Bureau of Reclamation, the Yuma Project became a successful farmland and agribusiness hotspot. Infrastructure in Yuma was developed to attract more population and marketers.…
In this essay you will learn about a park that is located in New Braunfels, TX. This park is the home of the largest springs in Texas. The Comal Springs has seven major springs and dozens of smaller ones that occur over a distance of 4,300 feet. The Springs and the Comal River are home to a federally endangered species named Fountain Darter. Though there are other rivers and springs in New Braunfels, the Comal Springs flows through the popular Landa Park which is home to wildlife and a great place to enjoy a nice day.…
I invite you to explore Black Canyon on the western slope of the White Mountains, about 20 minutes east of Bishop, California. This obscure canyon is a highly colorful, deep slash in the earth that keeps its many charms secret to all but a handful of Eastern Sierra visitors. It is an easily accessible location that does not involve a scary, butt-clenching drive on the brink of a thousand-foot drop into the abyss.…
The Little rock nine were a Group of African Americans who weren’t allowed to enter a all white school called Central High School.The nine members of the little rock nine were Ernest Green , Minnijean Brown , Elizabeth Eckford , Melba Pattillo, Thelma Mothershed Wair, Terrence Roberts, Carlotta Walls LaNier, Gloria Ray Karlmark , and Jefferson Alison Thomas.…
As I walk through a winding path of trees, surrounded by a lush colorful landscape, and a steep ravine to my side, I stop to take the time to listen to the different birds chirping a beautiful song, thinking I must be dreaming this can’t be in Florida, but it is! I am at Ravine Garden State Park in Palatka, Florida. If you are like me you tend to think of Florida as being pretty flat or all beaches but this is not true. This state park is home to not one but two ravines measuring up to 90 feet deep! It is imperative we protect gems like this. Ravine Garden State Park deserves continued financial support and preservation because it beautifully highlights how Florida's waterways shape and mold this state's landscape and history as well as showcases…
Have you ever wondered what was it like being a soldier in Washington’s Army? Facing severe weather, imminent death, and sickness in the battlefield this is what happens in the American Revolutionary War when they fought over British taxation. If I were a soldier in Washington’s Army and I had the choice of leaving and getting away from suffering or either staying, having a chance to die I would leave. No, I would have quit due to severe weather, lack of supplies, and deaths and sickness.…
There is no exaggeration to say Salinas is the most beautiful, sophisticated and largest municipality of California. It is also known as the salad bowl of the world because of its lettuce crops. Salinas, which means salty marshes ( in Spanish ), is located roughly eight miles from the Pacific Ocean, just outside of the southern portion of the Monterey Bay on California’s Central Coast, at an elevation about 6om high from the sea level.…
Residents of Montgomery County in southeast Texas are completely unaware of their depleting aquifers, thanks to the leaders they elected who have neglected the issue and continue on as if it is non-existent. The gulf coast aquifers that they obtain their water supply from are not able to produce enough water fast enough to meet the increasing demands from the county's growing population. When the regulations cap on pumping is reached other sources have been sought out including lake Conroe. However, pumping from other sources requires tests to be ran to check for cleanliness and the safety of the water. When the water is coming from somewhere other than an aquifer tests have to be run and filtering processes have to begin, which can become very costly.…
Looking at a map Pacific Grove, California appears as nothing more than a speck, located on the Monterey Peninsula and nestled between Monterey and Pebble Beach. One could miss this tiny town with the blink of an eye. It is here one day I found Perkins Park a place giving me solace, and granting me the freedom to reflect on how life use to be.…
“Listen to the mustn'ts, child. Listen to the don'ts. Listen to the shouldn'ts, the impossibles, the won'ts. Listen to the never haves, then listen close to me... Anything can happen, child. Anything can be.” On September 25, 1930, in Chicago, Illinois, Shel Silverstein was born to parents Nathan and Helen Silverstein. He attended the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Roosevelt University, Roosevelt High School, Chicago College of Performing Arts ,where he was expelled, and then the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. When he was around twelve years old, he began to draw. He especially liked to draw cartoons. Growing up, he always wanted to be a baseball player, or at least hit it off with some of the girls. (www.thefamouspeople.com) Neither baseball nor girls worked out for him, but little did he know that he would become a famous poet.…
Man has never been content to leave the natural preserved in the state in which it was discovered. Likewise, the Everglades ecosystem has been bombarded by this pressure as man seeks to "redesign" the environment to suit the needs of the ever encroaching human population. This has brought about profound changes in this system and the way it operates.…
The everglades has had three large droughts in the past 10 years. When the water amounts in the everglades are so low it will take more phosphorus and mud with it which is not good. One of the issues that the everglades faces is the sugar cane. The everglades is home for 440,000 acres of sugar cane. The more sugar can there is the less living land for plants and animals there is. Another reason the sugar cane is bad is because it is harvested for large industries and sold as sugar so most people don’t want it removed. But sugar cane brings a lot of nitrogen and phosphorus into the everglades. But there is still hope for the everglades in the source “Can we fix the water supply” it states “A supreme court decision made in 2004 implemented an $8.4 million project to re-establish the natural flow of water to the everglades in the next 30 years.” This means there is still hope for the everglades and nobody is giving up on the wonderful…
The first step to solving any problem is realizing there is one. Amarillo and the rest of the Panhandle get its water from the Ogallala Aquifer which is a vast yet shallow underground water table located beneath the Great Plains that spans across portions of eight states including the northern tip of the Texas panhandle. A large portion of the irrigated land in the US rests atop this aquifer system, which yields about a third of the nation’s ground water used for irrigation. The Ogallala Aquifer is also responsible for providing drinkable water to almost all of the people who live within the aquifer boundary. This presents a problem because water is being consumed at a faster rate than it can be recharged naturally through rivers or rainfall. The unfortunate part is that once the water is consumed completely it will not be replenished fast enough to support the population who currently depend on it. This poses a threat because the loss of water in the Ogallala Aquifer will lend to the collapse of the central food production in America if something is not done. Additionally, once the water is gone and as long as there is no alternative plan to bring water into the areas that the Ogallala Aquifer feed into, the populations who depend on the Ogallala Aquifer’s water supply will be forced to relocate to new locations with a source of fresh water. The results of the aquifer drying up are not so far from home however. I read recently in an article that Happy, Texas’s population is getting smaller and smaller with less and less economic and agricultural business because some of their water wells no longer reach the aquifer anymore. This is forcing some of their citizens to seek employment outside the city up to an hour away. Many towns, including Amarillo, that rely on the Ogallala Aquifer will undoubtedly share the same fate as the faithful town of Happy, Texas at the rate water from the aquifer is being consumed.…