Water in Kansas: Past & Present
Date and Time: April 23, 2019, 6:30 PM CT
Location:
Inman Community Building, East Center Street, Inman
(view on google maps)
Presented by Rex Buchanan
Early evidence of Native peoples in Kansas shows that they lived near springs, seeps, and rivers. Later, European settlers moved along water sources, and eventually cities were established in areas with plentiful water supplies. Even today, demographic changes in Kansas are the result of water: scarcity connected to water-level declines in the Ogallala Aquifer is impacting depopulation in western Kansas, whereas some eastern Kansas counties, which are relatively water-rich, are gaining population. Recently the state government developed a 50-year water planning vision, identifying two major issues: reservoir sedimentation and the rapid drawdown of the Ogallala portion of the High Plains Aquifer in western Kansas. This presentation highlights how water issues today will define much about Kansans in the future, just as they always have.
Sponsored by: Inman Museum Association
For more information about this event, please contact:
Rosetta Bartels
(620) 585-6715
http://www.inmanmuseum.org