New Mexico Water Impact Report Receives Top National Honor

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This article was originally published by the Los Alamos Reporter.

NM TECH NEWS RELEASE

A landmark report, developed by the New Mexico Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources, has received a prestigious national award. The John C. Frye Memorial Award was presented to the Bureau by the Geological Society of America and the Association of American State Geologists at its mid-year meeting held in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on Oct. 15.

The paper, Bulletin 164 — Climate Change in New Mexico Over the Next 50 Years: Impacts on Water Resources, provides a scientific foundation for efforts to mitigate negative effects of changes to the state’s climate and impacts on water resources over the next 50 years. 

Three of the report’s co-authors were on hand to accept the award. Dr. Nelia W. Dunbar, director and state geologist, New Mexico Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources; Dr. Fred M. Phillips, emeritus professor of hydrology at New Mexico Tech; and Anne C. Tillery, surface systems specialist at the U.S. Geological Survey New Mexico Water Science Center in Albuquerque. The three represented the publication’s authors and contributors, all leading experts in climate and weather science. 

Along with Dunbar and Phillips, the publication’s editors include Dr. David Gutzler, Kristin Pearthree and Dr. Paul Bauer. Besides Tillery, other contributing authors include Dr. Craig Allen, Dr. David DuBois, Mike Harvey, Dr. J. Phillip King, Dr. Leslie McFadden and Dr. Bruce Thomson.

The John C. Frye Award is given each year to a nominated environmental geology publication published in the current year or one of the three preceding calendar years either by GSA or by a state geological survey. The award was established in 1989 in memory of John C. Frye, a glacial geologist by training who served as the director of the Kansas Geological Survey (1945-1954), the chief of the Illinois State Geological Survey (1954-1974), and the executive director of the GSA (1974-1982). Frye’s work is considered influential in the growth of environmental geology as a field of study.

In his nomination letter, Dr. J. Michael Timmons, deputy director of the Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources, lauded the publication for its examination of different facets of the state’s water budget, which he said “comprehensively provides critical data and analysis of climate impacts in each area. The combined effort is compelling and the results are stark.”

Patrick D. McCarthy, water policy officer with the Santa Fe-based Thornburg Foundation, said in his nomination letter that water managers, water users and policymakers need the best available scientific information for planning and management.

“This authoritative and well-edited publication offers information about climate impacts on water resources that is well-supported, stark, and challenging – a straightforward approach that was welcomed by New Mexico water users, community leaders, journalists, and conservation professionals alike,” he said.

John Fleck, professor of practice in water policy and governance at the UNM Department of Economics and writer in residence at the Utton Transboundary Resources Center at the UNM School of Law, praised the exceptional work of the report’s authors and its lasting impact on water resource management and climate change policy in New Mexico.

This report serves as a prime example of the critical role that scientific boundary work plays in providing a strong foundation for good government policy,” he said in his nomination letter.

The report is available publicly on the New Mexico Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources website at:  

https://geoinfo.nmt.edu/publications/monographs/bulletins/164/home.cfm

The New Mexico Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources is located on the campus of New Mexico Tech in Socorro, New Mexico.

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October 30, 2023