Tri-State's Innovation Working Group (IWG) Program

A key mechanism for facilitating collaborations is the Tri-State’s Innovation Working Group (IWG) Program, which supports collaborative, trans-disciplinary work by the three member states. The IWG provides a venue for engaging scientists and educators, along with key nationally and internationally recognized experts. This program supports week-long working group activities that are modeled after those hosted by the highly successful NSF-supported National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (NCEAS).

IWGs

January 2013: Building resilience in water governance: an interdisciplinary investigation into the social-ecological system dynamics of climate change, Melinda Benson (Synergia Ranch, New Mexico)
February 2011: Indicators of Ecological Thresholds, Robert Heinse (University of Idaho)
February 2011: CyberEnabled Science IWG, Karl Benedict (University of New Mexico)
September 2010: Western Tri-State Diversity Innovation Working Group, Michele Casella (Nevada EPSCoR)
May 2010: Identifying the Most Relevant Spatial and Temporal Scales of Climate Change with Respect to Surface Hydrologic Processes, Amanda White (New Mexico Tech)
March 2010: Paleo-rainfall and Groundwater Recharge in Southern Nevada over the Past 11,000 Years from Cave Calcite Deposits, Matthew Lachniet (University of Nevada, Las Vegas)
October 2009: The Effects of Climate Change on Ecosystems and Societies: A Focus on Native American and Hispanic Communities, Karletta Chief (Desert Research Institute)
Additional New Mexico EPSCoR IWGs


March 2010: Paleo-rainfall and Groundwater Recharge in Southern Nevada over the Past 11,000 Years from Cave Calcite Deposits, Matthew Lachniet (University of Nevada, Las Vegas)

Southern Nevada is one of the driest regions in North America, yet is host to a large and expanding population in Las Vegas and Clark County that relies upon distant snowmelt to feed the water supply of the Colorado River. Currently, 12-15% of the Las Vegas Valley’s water supply comes from shallow groundwater in alluvial fans, much of which is derived from high-altitude recharge from snowmelt in the Spring Mountains which border the Las Vegas Valley to the west. This groundwater and that from other basins in southern and central Nevada may become increasingly relied upon to provide freshwater resources to the Clark County urban areas. Despite the region’s arid location, little is known of the past precipitation history in the Mojave Desert, without which it is difficult to reliably predict future water availability.
 
The purpose of this IWG was to initiate inter-state collaboration to review and discuss the paleoclimatic scientific literature for southern Nevada and the Mojave Desert. IWG participants met at the Walking Box Ranch and held a day-long meeting on scientific objectives, priorities, possible field sites, and discussions of climate records in southern Nevada. This established a conceptual foundation for development of a full proposal to the National Science Foundation’s (NSF) PaleoPerspectives on Climate Change Program (P2C2) for an October, 2010 submission.
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This material is based in part upon work supported by: The National Science Foundation under grant number(s) IIA-1329469, IIA-1329470 and IIA-1329513. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.