My area of study is the Karst terrain found in the Ozarks. Not so much Chemistry per se. More like geology. I also know quite a bit about native wildflowers. I'm sure your work is fascinating. I would love to hear more sometime.
I am a geochemist actually! I know lots about karast and subsurface water movement. That is awesome. I see your posts about wildflowers, the spring time gives you lots of photo ops
You might have missed some of my Karst-centric posts. I visit large volume springs and caves. I read about the dye studies here and things like spring recharge areas. I've visited some of the largest around here like Big Spring, Mammoth Spring and Greer Spring. I will send you the links, if interested. I would love to talk to you some day. The Ozarks are a truly a land of running water at the surface and below. We have some aquifers here in the trillions of gallons.
I see you are a chemist. I teach high school Chemistry. Nice chapter, thanks.
Hello fellow chemist. Chemistry was the only class in high school I made a 100 in, now I study water chemistry for a living.
My area of study is the Karst terrain found in the Ozarks. Not so much Chemistry per se. More like geology. I also know quite a bit about native wildflowers. I'm sure your work is fascinating. I would love to hear more sometime.
I am a geochemist actually! I know lots about karast and subsurface water movement. That is awesome. I see your posts about wildflowers, the spring time gives you lots of photo ops
You might have missed some of my Karst-centric posts. I visit large volume springs and caves. I read about the dye studies here and things like spring recharge areas. I've visited some of the largest around here like Big Spring, Mammoth Spring and Greer Spring. I will send you the links, if interested. I would love to talk to you some day. The Ozarks are a truly a land of running water at the surface and below. We have some aquifers here in the trillions of gallons.
I do a lot of work with tracing water back to its source formation