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Inserted under Tenure 8/9/24

During his first five terms in office (2013-2022), Bera was a cosponsor of 95 legislative items that became law and an original cosponsor of none.[1] Acts designating a name for a Federal property accounted for 44 of the 95, typically with 50 or more cosponsors. Another 37 were general consensus items cosponsored by at least one third of the 435-member House, of which 27 were cosponsored by at least two thirds. Bera cosponsored only one successful item with fewer than 30 cosponsors. He was the final of 7 cosponsors for H.R.3399 in the 116th Congress, which became law on 30 October 2020.[2] The law authorized the Nutria Eradication and Control Act of 2003 to continue through 2025 and made California eligible for program grants. Nutria are an invasive species of large, semiaquatic rodents whose burrowing could threaten levees in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta, where productive farmland lies below sea level.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Member activity by Ami Bera". Library of Congress. Retrieved 10 August 2024.
  2. ^ "H.R.3399 - To amend the Nutria Eradication and Control Act of 2003". Library of Congress. Retrieved 10 August 2024.


Archive

[edit]
File:Wasserstand.JPG
See Commons for File:Wasserstand.JPG for category listings

100-year flood [1]: 16–19 

Study tutorials, assign categories to 2 images in commons

Substantial rewrite 6/18/24

Context and references 7/20/24

New article 2/28/23. Linked to nearby site articles.

Substantial rewrite on economy, hydrology, ecology using mostly USGS sources 2/22/23

By 1898 the project made the Kanawha the first fully controlled river navigation system in America.[2]

Schematic diagram of a groundwater monitoring well

Added schematic of monitoring well to article and commons

Added details from Baptist:Slavery & Capitalism plus axe industry further reading 10/6/22

Substantial rewrite to Early Life 9/12/22

Substantial rewrite 9/4/22

Complete rewrite 8/30/22

Written, reviewed, declined 8/11/22

Paragraph re Wallowa Homeland and church return added at end on 10/22/21

John Harvey Butchart (May 10, 1907 – May 29, 2002) was a mathematics professor who was well known for his hiking exploits in and around the Grand Canyon in Arizona, United States. Beginning in 1945, Butchart explored the Grand Canyon's backcountry on foot. He wrote extensively about his adventures and influenced generations of canyoneers.

  • edits January-February 2021

Article was a mess. Tagged December 2020, removed 1/28/23

Inserted {{Cleanup rewrite}} Tag:it mixes concepts at 3 different space/time scales, Target:Battle of Losheim Gap

Listed in open tasks section of Wikipedia:WikiProject Military history/United States military history task force

The waste water in this incident is classic acid mine drainage, which is common around the world where subsurface mining exposes metal sulfide minerals such as pyrite to water and air. The release volume was equivalent to less than 1 hour of Animas River streamflow above Cement Creek (120 ft3/s) on the day of the spill or 11 minutes of streamflow downstream at Durango, Colorado, the next day (600 ft3/s).[3] Extensive research has been published for the Cement Creek basin and similar watersheds affected by acid mine drainage at Summitville, Colorado, and elsewhere.[4]

Stream conditions that had been common[5] in the area 20 years earlier returned temporarily following the spill.

The chemical processes involved in acid mine drainage are common around the world where subsurface mining exposes metal sulfide minerals such as pyrite to water and air.


Block2 references

[edit]
  1. ^ Eychaner, J.H. (2015) Lessons from a 500-year record of flood elevations Association of State Floodplain Managers, Technical Report 7 URL accessed 2015-06-27.
  2. ^ Kemp, Emory (2000). The Great Kanawha Navigation. University of Pittsburgh Press. ISBN 9780822961277.
  3. ^ USGS database URL accessed 2015-08-12.
  4. ^ "Bibliography, Watershed Contamination from Hard-Rock Mining — Hardrock Mining in Rocky Mountain Terrain — Upper Arkansas River, Colorado " U.S. Geological Survey, Toxic Substances Hydrology Program URL accessed 2015-08-12.
  5. ^ Schemel, L.E., and Cox, M.H. (2005) "Descriptions of the Animas River-Cement Creek Confluence and Mixing Zone near Silverton, Colorado, during the Late Summers of 1996 and 1997 " U.S. Geological Survey Open File Report 2005-1064 URL accessed 2015-08-12.