Federal Register Volume 33 • Number 159
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Water Resource Availability in the Kankakee River Basin, Indiana: Division of Water, Water Resources, Assessment 90-3
WATER RESOURCE AVAILABILITY IN THE KANKAKEE RIVER BASIN, DIVISION OF WATER published 1990 INDIANA - EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Figure 1. Location of the Kankakee River Basin In response to legislative directives contained in the 1983 Water Resource Management Act, the Indiana Department of Natural Resources, Division of Water published a report describing the availability, distribution, quality, and use of surface water and ground water in the Kankakee River Basin, Indiana.* The third in a series of 12 regional watershed assess- ments, the report provides hydrologic data and related information for persons interested in the basin’s water resource. The following is a summary of that report. The full report can be obtained from the Indiana Department of Natural Resources, Division of Water. For ordering information, please see the instructions printed at the end of this summary. The Kankakee River Basin drains 2989 sq. mi. (square miles) in northwest Indiana, 2169 sq. mi. in northeast Illinois, and about 7 sq. mi. in southwest Lower Michigan (figure 1). The Kankakee River heads near South Bend, Indiana, then flows westward into Illinois, where it joins with the Des Plaines River to form the Illinois River. The area of Lake County which originally drained to Lake Michigan but now drains by means of artificial diversion to the Illinois River is not considered to be part of the Kankakee River Basin study region. Although the Kankakee River basin includes portions of Indiana, Illinois, and Michigan, the discussion below will focus on the Indiana portion of the basin. SOCIOECONOMIC SETTING Thirteen Indiana counties lie completely or partially within the Kankakee River Basin, but nine counties consti- tute more than 90 percent of the basin’s land area in Indiana. -
2017 State of Illinois Department of Natural Resources Illinois Fishing Information Effective: April 1, 2017 Through March 31, 2018
2017 State of Illinois Department of Natural Resources Illinois Fishing Information Effective: April 1, 2017 through March 31, 2018 Wayne Herndon, veteran IDNR Fisheries Biologist, 45 years of service to the anglers of Illinois IDNR Division of Fisheries Division of Fisheries www.dnr.illinois.gov www.ifishillinois.org Building the Future of Fishing in Illinois FC1 Message from the Director Thank you for picking up a copy of the 2017 Illinois Fishing Information guide. The booklet is packed with useful information on places to fish and rules to follow when fishing in Illinois. In the pages that follow, those who enjoy fishing will find an updated summary of statewide fishing regulations in Illinois, as well as details on site-specific regulations that are organized by the body of water or water area at which those regulations apply. Once again for 2017, Illinois Free Fishing Days will be during the Father’s Day weekend in June – with the dates of Friday, June 16 through Monday, June 19. Free Fishing Days provide an opportunity for novice anglers and families to go fishing even if they have not yet purchased a fishing license. While we update the Illinois Fishing Information guide each year, some site-specific regulations may be changed in emergency situations through the administrative rule process. In those cases, the emergency changes to regulations will be posted at the location where the rules apply. We also post changes in rules online at www.ifishillinois.org. Illinois anglers are guardians of our state’s aquatic resources. The money you spend on fishing licenses and equipment helps fund our fishery programs, and helps ensure the future of fishing in Illinois. -
2021 Fishing Regulation Information
Illinois 2021 REGULATION INFORMATION Effective: April 1, 2021 through March 31, 2022 Inside: • Current fishing regulations • Aquatic nuisance species • Places to fish • Illinois fish and your health • Current state records • Catchable trout program • Angler Alerts! • Free Fishing Days Division of Fisheries www.dnr.illinois.govFC1 www.ifishillinois.org Message from the Director Thank you for your interest in fishing in Illinois and for reviewing this 2021 edition of the Illinois Fishing Information guide. This booklet is an excellent resource for details on the best places to fish in Illinois, along with the rules and regulations in place for the 2021 season. During the last year, as we all dealt with the many challenges of the coronavirus pandemic, we saw an increase in interest in spending time outdoors in Illinois, including new and renewed interest in fishing. Our Division of Fisheries staff prepared this 2021 Illinois Fishing Information guide to provide an updated summary of statewide fishing regulations, as well as details on important site-specific regulations organized by the body of water or water area at which those regulations apply. On occasion, some site-specific regulations may be changed in emergency situations through the administrative rule process. In those cases, the changes are posted at the location where the rules apply, and online at www.ifishillinois.org. A reminder that the 2021 Illinois Free Fishing Days will be Friday, June 18 through Monday, June 21 – Father’s Day weekend – providing families and individuals a chance to go fishing even if they have not yet purchased an Illinois fishing license. The purchases of fishing licenses and equipment help fund our fisheries programs and ensure the future of fishing in Illinois. -
Andres Serrano Controversy (1989) Humanities, Subject Files II (1962-1996)
University of Rhode Island DigitalCommons@URI Education: National Endowment for the Arts and Obscenity: Andres Serrano Controversy (1989) Humanities, Subject Files II (1962-1996) 1989 Obscenity: Andres Serrano Controversy (1989): Booklet 01 Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.uri.edu/pell_neh_II_59 Recommended Citation "Obscenity: Andres Serrano Controversy (1989): Booklet 01" (1989). Obscenity: Andres Serrano Controversy (1989). Paper 26. http://digitalcommons.uri.edu/pell_neh_II_59/26http://digitalcommons.uri.edu/pell_neh_II_59/26 This Booklet is brought to you for free and open access by the Education: National Endowment for the Arts and Humanities, Subject Files II (1962-1996) at DigitalCommons@URI. It has been accepted for inclusion in Obscenity: Andres Serrano Controversy (1989) by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@URI. For more information, please contact [email protected]. i • ~ll!llfmnBlll ~d I ~ ~ 1 lllmnh odl ~ IHJlllIDBmlli!llm ~i.\IBF'- ' . 9 \ lir I "(Q)fy;~ e @f ' I ~ '1( Jg IJ ~ ft I I JP~- I i This booklet provides information about the National Endowment for the Humanities, an independent federal agency created in 1965 to support research, education, and public programs in the humanities. The first section provides information about the history, purposes, policies, and organization of the Endowment to help individuals and organizations determine whether proposed projects and activities in the humanities may be eligible for Endowment support. The second section provides information on the activities supported by the Endowment's grant-making programs, as well as a current schedule of application deadlines for these programs. The booklet also includes a directory of Endowment telephone numbers, names and addresses of the state humanities councils, and a list of members of the National Council on the Humanities. -
Rittmann Complete CV January 2 2014
BRUCE E. RITTMANN Regents’ Professor and Director Swette Center for Environmental Biotechnology Biodesign Institute at Arizona State University 1001 South McAllister Avenue P.O. Box 875701 Tempe, AZ 85287-5701 U.S.A. ph. 480-727-0434; fax. 480-727-0889 Website at: www.eb.biodesign.asu.edu E-mail. [email protected] Education: Ph.D. Environmental Engineering, Stanford University (1979) M.S. Environmental Engineering, Washington University (1974) B.S. Civil Engineering, Washington University (1974) Professional Appointments: • Director, Swette Center for Environmental Biotechnology, Biodesign Institute at Arizona State University (1/2005-present) • Regents’ Professor, School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment, Arizona State University, with affiliate appointments as noted just below (2009-present) • Distinguished Sustainability Scientist, Global Institute of Sustainability, Arizona State University (12/2010-present) • Lincoln Scholar, Lincoln Center for Applied Ethics, Arizona State University (2012-present) • Professor, Dept. of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, Arizona State University (1/2005-2009) • Affiliate appointments in the Dept. of Chemical Engineering, School of Life Sciences, School of Sustainability, Biological Design Ph.D. Program, Dept. of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Environmental Life Science Graduate Program (2005 – present) • John Evans Professor of Environmental Engineering, Dept. of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Northwestern University (9/1992-12/2004) • Professor of Environmental -
"Marsh" of Northern Indiana and Illinois
The Kankakee "Marsh" of Northern Indiana and Illinois INTRODUCTION SYSTEMATIC studies in land utilization, such as have been undertaken in recent years by the Federal Departments of Agriculture and of the Interior, by the Michigan Land Economic Survey, and other state departments, together with the researches conducted by various public and private agencies, as reported in the bulletins of the New York Social Science Research Council, all reflect the need for a scientific analysis of the land- utilization problems of the United States. Regions which at one time or another have experienced competing and conflicting claims to land use generally furnish excellent material for land-utilization studies. The Kankakee marsh reclaimed area of northern Indiana and Illinois is such an area. Here clashed the interests of the hunter-sportsman-conservationist group with those of the organized land companies and of individuals interested in the reclamation of the wetlands for agricultural use. The author's interest in the region was aroused several years ago as a result of public propaganda and a petition to the Federal Government by a group of the Izaak Walton League to restore at least a part of the original marsh-swamp, once nationally famous for its wild life, particularly wild fowl. Studies of this type especially recommend themselves today in connection with the nation's agricultural and conservational readjustment policies. The Kankakee country represents essentially an intermorainal marsh reclaimed valley extending from South Bend, Indiana, southwestward to Momence, Illinois. Down the wide, flat-floored valley coursed the original meandering Kankakee River, now a series of straight ditches. -
Guide to the Geology of the Kankakee River State Park Area
557 IL6gui 1997-C jide to the Geology of Kankakee River State Park Area, Kankakee County, Illinois Wayne T. Frankie Field Trip Guidebook 1997C September 20, 1997 Field Trip Guidebook 1998B May 30, 1998 Department of Natural Resources ILLINOIS STATE GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2012 with funding from University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign http://archive.org/details/guidetogeology97fran Guide to the Geology of Kankakee River State Park Area, Kankakee County, Illinois Wayne T. Frankie Field Trip Guidebook 1 997C September 20, 1 997 Field Trip Guidebook 1 998B May 30, 1 998 Department of Natural Resources ILLINOIS STATE GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Natural Resources Building 61 5 E. Peabody Drive Champaign, IL 61820-6964 Cover photo View of Rock Creek from suspension bridge looking north (photo by Joel M. Dexter). Geological Science Field Trip The Geoscience Education and Outreach unit of the Illinois State Geological Survey (ISGS) conducts four free tours each year to acquaint the public with the rocks, mineral resources, and landscapes of various regions of the state and the geological processes that have formed them. Each trip is an all-day excursion through one or more Illinois counties. Frequent stops are made to explore interesting phenomena, explain the processes that shape our environ- ment, discuss principles of earth science, and collect rocks and fossils. People of all ages and inter- ests are welcome. The trips are especially helpful to teachers preparing earth science units. Grade school students are welcome, but each must be accompanied by a parent or guardian. High school science classes should be supervised by at least one adult for each ten students. -
The History of Indiana During the Glacial Period
The History of Indiana During the Glacial Period. CHAPTER I. PREGLACIAL INDIANA. To reconstruct the history of Indiana during the glacial period we must first glance at the INDIANA of late Tertiary times. NeU'som-Proc. Ind. Acad. Sc. 1897. pp. 250-3: The general topography ~f the state would have shown us various physiographic provinces distinguished fcom one and anoth er by characteristics. Leverett-U. S. G. S. Mon. No. 41, p. 77. The southeast section we might have called the Cincinnati Island. The soil of the hills and valleys was underlain by lime stones and shales of .the Ordivician and Silurian age and due to a Paleozoic uplift this province stood higher than the regions to the west and northwest of it. Not_In this region at the headwaters of the White and Whitewater Rivers in Randolph and Wayne counties. we stllI find the highest elevations in the state. To the west of the Cincinnati Island is a broad north and south valley, which at first glance might seem the valley of a mighty glader draining stream, but which closer investigation shows is a valley formed by many subaerial degradation agencies in the soft underlying shales of Devonian age. This region with next to be mentioned we might call the Devonian Valley. Note--Newsom calls this the Eastern Lowland, a term which does not describe it clearly enoughit seems. Proc. Ind. Acad. Sc. 1897, pp. 250-3 . Leverett, No. 41, p. 70. Running southwest across the central part of the state, just north of the Cincinnati Island, was another wide valley, 50 miles or more in breadth. -
E Underground Waters of North-Central Indiana
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR UNITED STATES GEOLOGICAL SURVEY GEORGE OTIS SMITH, DIRECTOR WATER-SUPPLY PAPER 254 I E UNDERGROUND WATERS OF NORTH-CENTRAL INDIANA BY STEPHEN R. CAPPS WITH A CHAPTER ON :HE CHEMICAL CHARACTER OF THE WATERS R. B. DOLE WASHINGTON GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 1910 DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR UNITED STATES GEOLOGICAL SUEVEY GEORGE OTIS SMITH, DIEECTOE WATER-SUPPLY PAPER 254 THE UNDERGROUND WATERS OF NORTH-CENTRAL INDIANA BY STEPHEN K. CAPPS WITH A CHAPTER ON THE CHEMICAL CHARACTER OF THE WATERS BY R B nOTF Water Resources Bran*. K. J3. DOLE/ . .., Geological burvey, Box 3106, Capitol Stalk* Oklahoma Ciiy, Okk. WASHINGTON GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 1910 CONTENTS. Page. Introduction,............................................................. 13 Need of investigations................................................. 13 Previous work......................................................... 13 Conditions under which work was done................................. 15 General summary of results............................................ 15 Acknowledgments...................................................... 16 Geography................................................................. 17 Drainage and relief.................................................... 17 Wabash River system............................................. 17 White River system............................................... 18 Kankakee River system........................................... 18 St. Joseph River system........................................... -
Agency Training Centers for Federal Employees. INSTITUTION Civil Service Commission, Washington, D.C
DOCUMENT RESUME ED 041 246 AC 008 382 TITLE Agency Training Centers for Federal Employees. INSTITUTION Civil Service Commission, Washington, D.C. Bureau of Training. REPORT NO PAM-T-5 PUB DATE Jun 70 NOTE 103p.; Revised edition AVAILABLE FROM Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office Washington, D.C. 20402 (Document No. 1970 0-389-650) EDRS PRICE EDRS Price MF-$0.50 HC Not Available from EDRS. DESCRIPTORS Admission Criteria, *Agencies, *Continuing Education Centers, *Directories, *Federal Government, Geographic Regions, *Government Employees, Information Sources, Training Objectives, Units of Study (Subject Fields) ABSTRACT Planned to provide management and training officials throughout the Federal Government with up-to-date information on agency operated training centers, this directory gives, for each center, the purpose, programs or courses offered, eligibility for attendance, and sources for further information. Ten regional centers of the Civil Service Commission are listed. Then follow: nine centers under the Department of Agriculture; one under the Civil Service Commission; six under the Department of Commerce; and others under Department of Defense; the District of Columbia; Health, Education and Welfare; Interior; Justice; Panama Canal Company; Post Office; Railroad Retirement Board; Small Business Administration; State; Transportation; and the Treasury--87 in all. There is an index of location by state and a subject index. (PT) PAMPHLET I Agency Training Centers For Federal Employees JUNE 1970 U.S CIVIL SERVICE -
Annual Report to the Board of Natural Resources and Conservation
Illinois State Geological Survey Annual Report July 1990 - June 1991 Illinois Department of Energy and Natural Resources State Geological Survey Division Annual Report to the Board of Natural Resources and Conservation June 1990 to July 1991 Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2012 with funding from University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign http://archive.org/details/annualreporttob9091illi CONTENTS 1990-1991 HIGHLIGHTS AND SUMMARY 1 MINERAL RESOURCES 17 Illinois Mineral Industry in 1989 and 1990 17 Coal 17 Coal Database Management 19 Coal Mining Geology 20 Coal Resources 20 Coal Characterization 21 Coal Cleaning: Physical and Microbial 22 Coal Cleaning: Chemical and Thermal 24 Coal Combustion 24 Fuels and Chemicals from Coal 25 Liquids and Gases from Coal 26 Technical Support Services 27 Coal Analysis Laboratory Services 27 Technology Transfer and Information Services 28 Oil and Gas 29 Oil and Gas Program for Illinois 29 Oil and Gas Statistics 29 Improved Oil Recovery Methods and Concepts 30 New Exploration Methods and Concepts 34 Hydrocarbon Generation and Migration Studies 35 Oil and Gas Database Management 35 Technology Transfer and Information Services 35 Other Energy Sources 36 Groundwater Resources 37 Groundwater Assessment 37 Technical Assistance 38 Technology Transfer and Information Services 39 Industrial Minerals 39 Mineral Resource Assessments 40 Limestone and Dolomite Resources 43 Silica and Industrial Sand 43 Clay Mineralogy and Clay Resources 44 Fluorspar and Metal Resources 44 Beneficiation/Processing 44 Technology Transfer -
The Old Kankakee
..-- -���� �- ;::.--�� HE OLD ){ KANKAKEE" -� _,;;;=...-- - :J-oreworJ HE fabulous Kankakee Valley of old has become a legend among American sportsmen. T In the march of civilization and development the famous "Old Kankakee" was doomed by the theory that all marsh land should be good agricultural land. Experience has proven the fallacy of this theory as an inf!::dlible gauge for determinalion of land capabilities and possibilities. Experience has demonstrated that all too often we have destroyed real .and valuable resources in pursuit of other values which all too often failed to materialize. Too, changing values have given us a greater appreciation of the resources we have destroyed in the relentless march of "development". In all too many instances we failed to weigh the values to be destroyed against the expected new values to be created. Such was the case of the Kankakee. Much of the land reclaimed for agricultural pursuits proved to be good agricultural land indeed; much proved well nigh. valueless for farming. But to make this discovery we destroyed one of the greatest waterfowl concentration areas in the world, one of the greatest fishing areas of the Middle West and one of the most efficient flood control reservoirs in the Upper Mississippi watershed. As a result of our mistakes in management we lost an increasingly valuable wildlife resource, we contributed to increasingly disastrous floods in the Mississippi watershed, and we have seen countless thousands of tons of rich topsoil lost by erosion of both wind and water. When a realization of these consequences began to dawn on many of us, we commenced to speculate on the possibility of bringing back at least a portion of that which had been lost to Indiana, to the nation and to the entire continent.