Bob, many thanks for posting this excellent account of Isaacson's work. There is some irony here. The reason why hydrogeologist Ed Rhodehamel worked with foresters like Little, Little, and Doolittle was not to bolster pine pulpwood production as reported, but to increase water infiltration into the Kirkwood–Cohansey Aquifer system. They encouraged pine growth over oak to acheive greater opportunity for groundwater exploitation. Little did they know then that pines are thirstier than oaks. Instead—apparently—it was the harvesting of the pines that really mattered.
The metric 17-trillion—of course—describes how much water fills the Kirkwood-Cohansey Aquifer. Everyone who paged through McPhee knows this one. It is a USGS hydrogeologist who came up with this figure. Actually the more accurate amount is 17.7 trillion (based on Rhodehamel 1979, as quoted by...
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