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APW tabling at event

APW Launches New Nature of Groundwater Exhibition

Friday

Arizona Project WET (APW) is proud to announce that the kickoff of its highly anticipated "Nature of Groundwater" exhibition will be held in the heart of the White Mountains, the first stop on a statewide tour aimed at increasing public awareness and understanding of groundwater’s vital role in Arizona’s water future.

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photo of Karletta Chief

IRes Director Karletta Chief Named Inaugural Haury Endowed Professor

Friday
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Routledge Water Diplomacy Handbook  cover featuring various water related images

Routledge Water Diplomacy Handbook Now Available

Friday

The open access, recently published Routledge Handbook of Water Diplomacy offers a comprehensive guide to understanding and practicing water diplomacy while navigating the art and science of building relationships, negotiating shared interests, and managing complex water challenges across physical, political, and societal boundaries.

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photo of tree rings

U of A Scientists Use Tree Rings to Reconstruct Jet Stream History

Oct. 17, 2025

A recent study led by U of A scientists developed new insights into the atmospheric forces that shape extreme summer weather by examining tree rings. In a study published in the journal AGU Advances, researchers used centuries of tree-ring records to reconstruct the history of jet stream patterns known as “locked” wave5 configurations, which can stall weather systems and trigger heat waves and drought across continents.

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photo showing nogales

Transboundary Collaboration Tackles Water Challenges in Ambos Nogales

Oct. 17, 2025

On October 8, Elia Tapia, Associate in Extension at the WRRC, joined representatives from Santa Cruz County, the City of Nogales, the Arizona Department of Environmental Quality (ADEQ), and Arizona State University (ASU) at the Santa Cruz County Complex to review findings from three initiatives addressing water management and flooding challenges in Ambos Nogales.

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did you know graphic

Did You Know? La Paz County Water Facts

Oct. 17, 2025

The primary source of water in La Paz County is surface water (87%), with groundwater making up the remaining supply (13%). Most surface water in La Paz County comes from the Colorado River and its tributaries. Colorado River water is managed by the US Bureau of Reclamation and the Arizona Department of Water Resources (ADWR) based on Colorado River entitlements.

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CRB delegation

Colorado River Basin Delegation Attends Workshop on Indigenous and Western Science

Oct. 17, 2025

Last week, October 8–10, 2025, a delegation from the Colorado River Basin (CRB) traveled to Toronto, Ontario, Canada, to participate in a workshop on “Braiding Knowledges in Water & Land: Collaborative Adaptive Management.” WRRC Director Sharon B. Megdal and Dr. Karletta Chief (Diné), Director of the Indigenous Resilience Center at the U of A, were among the organizers of the workshop, which included representatives from the CRB, the Bay Delta region of California, Australia, and Canada.

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Map of WRRIs

WRRA Facilitates 60 Years of Water Research

Oct. 10, 2025

The year 2024 marked the 60th anniversary of US President Lyndon B. Johnson’s signing of the 1964 Water Resources Research Act (WRRA). In celebration of the momentous occasion, UCOWR released a special issue earlier this year (April 2025) of the Journal of Contemporary Water Research and Education (JCWRE), which was dedicated to the rich history and wide-ranging impacts of the work of NIWR centers and institutes.

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Lucero Radonic

Where Are They Now?

Oct. 10, 2025

Soon after serving in the role of Graduate Outreach Assistant at the WRRC from August 2013 to June 2014, alongside working toward her PhD, Lucero Radonic joined the faculty at Michigan State University. In 2023, Radonic returned to Arizona, where she now works as an associate professor in the Department of Anthropology and the School of Earth and Sustainability at NAU, and leads the Water, Society, and Policy Lab.

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Grand Canyon

Continued Drought Likely in Water Year 2026

Oct. 10, 2025

October 1, 2025, marked the first day of the new water year.  In hydrology, a “water year” refers to the 12-month period in which precipitation totals are measured. The new water year starts in October because much of the precipitation that falls in late autumn and winter accumulates as snow and does not melt until the following spring or summer.

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