Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Water Resources Research Center in Tennessee

In Tennessee there is a research center dedicated to preserving our resource of water while limiting the emission of pollutants into the air. It is called the Water Resources Research Center (WRRC) and it helping many students to educate many communities while dedicating themselves to an endless amount of research.

The WRRC works hand in hand with the Urban Watershed Restoration project. This project was designed to help stop and prevent the erosion of pollution that is considered nonpoint. Nonpoint pollution is where the source of the problem does not come from the location where the land is being affected. Through this project the WRRC also helps to protect our resources by fixing habitat that has been destroyed naturally or otherwise as well as finding new ways to fix and prevent the destruction of our natural resources.

A great thing about the WRRC is that many of the solutions they are developing through their research to help rebuild our earth are made with all natural materials, like what they used to help repair any land that had essentially been torn apart from its natural state. They also have shown these techniques to teachers and other professionals so more people can be educated on the pollutants found in the watershed, as well as how they came to be there and how they are causing erosion in our lands and polluting other natural resources like our air.

The WRRC, in yet another attempt to educate the public on the importance of our natural resources in Tennessee is also holding many different workshops on various subjects to answer any questions and provide their researched solutions for consideration. The people who put on these workshops are actually students from different Universities throughout Tennessee. This is another great part of the WRRC, they offer many grants, internships and research experiences for adults, young and old, who want to further their education in water issues.

With the help of these students and the unlimited hours they are able to provide towards the research, many projects are people complete and communities are being educated. Some of the projects that the WRRC has undertaken to help people better understand how to utilize and save our natural resources include topics such as storm water management, erosion and sediment control and adopt-a-watershed program in Knox County schools, just to name a few.

The Center has about seven or so part time graduate students manning its different endeavors and assigning jobs to the undergraduates who are willing to volunteer their time. These graduate students are focusing mainly on research and are pursing degrees from everything in restoration ecology to urban planning. However the Center does have an emphasis on water restoration.

Among the things that are great about the Center is their ability to network with communities and professionals within those communities. Their partnerships are bringing in new federal grants and funding all the time to make sure that they can maintain and execute all of the positive results that have come from all of the research. If learning about natural resources and conservation is what you want, WRRC has it.

Samantha Kleiner shares information with homeowners. Check out:
http://www.localwaterremoval.com/Tennessee

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