Analyzing Water Resource Issues in the State of Mississippi

Merem, Edmund C. and Twumasi, Yaw A. and Wesley, Joan and Nwagboso, Emmanuel and Fageir, Siddig and Crisler, Marshand and Isokpehi, Peter and Olagbegi, Duro and Alsarari, Mohammed and Romorno, Coney (2019) Analyzing Water Resource Issues in the State of Mississippi. In: http://bp.bookpi.org/index.php/bpi/catalog/book/110. B P International, pp. 1-28. ISBN 978-93-89562-67-5

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Abstract

Aims: The paper assesses water resource issues in the state of Mississippi using GIS mapping.
Study Design: Adopted a mixscale appoach.
Methodology: The aproach is applied to GIS and primary data connected to descriptive statistics by
analyzing the impacts of water use through data collected at the state, county and regional level.
Place and Duration of Study: The counties of Mississippi between Spetember 2010-December
2013.
Results: The study shows a rise in pumpage among different sectors and a widening of boil water
alerts triggered by pollution and standard violations. With the vulnerability to water stress, and
potential scarcity from climate change. Regional comparisons point to the exposure to accumulative
groundwater depletion since the past several decades. While the spatial analysis revealed the
concentration of extensive groundwater water use and emergence of cone formation in the northwest
region of the state, the threats of contaminated sites, E. coli and coliform outbreak were evident
across space.
Conclusions: The assessment of these issues showed the capacity of mix scale approach in
highlighting the susceptibility of Mississippi’s water resources to degradation. From the spatial
patterns, the northwest and the south west area showed more concentration of higher pumpage than
other areas. Added to that is the notable presence of contaminated sites on areas adjacent to water
resources. In the process, mix scale approach enhanced our research and basis for appraising water
resource use. To mitigate the issues, the paper outlined five recommendations ranging from
education to the need for data infrastructure design and more use of GIS in water resource
management. The paper also outlined its contributions and areas for future research.

Item Type: Book Section
Subjects: Eprints STM archive > Multidisciplinary
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email admin@eprints.stmarchive
Date Deposited: 15 Nov 2023 07:27
Last Modified: 15 Nov 2023 07:27
URI: http://public.paper4promo.com/id/eprint/1465

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