Curtis J. Carley was employed by the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service, working out of its office in Albuquerque, New Mexico. On January 22, 1994, Carley was in the “Big Bend” area of the Rio Grande River in Brewster County, Texas, conducting a “National Wetlands Inventory,” which meant he had to view streams to […]
Curtis J. Carley was employed by the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service, working out of its office in Albuquerque, New Mexico. On January 22, 1994, Carley was in the “Big Bend” area of the Rio Grande River in Brewster County, Texas, conducting a “National Wetlands Inventory,” which meant he had to view streams to […]
The goal is to improve local mapping by detecting wetland presence and absence with an AI deep learning model. Following pilots in Kent County, Delaware and elsewhere, here's what's next for the research team.
halt that progress. now the supreme court is going to hear their case at the top of the hour at 10:00. shannon bream is following this story from the high court. very interesting interesting case. what is at stake here? reporter: martha. mike and chantelle sackett say it is not about them but all the other americans they heard from across the country doing bat well government bureaucracies. they bought a lot. started to clear and get ready for construction. that is when government officials told them they couldn t because it was a wetland. here is how mike sackett responded. we asked them what are you talking about? there is no standing water on our property. there is no flow of water off of our property. they said it is, they said it was on the wetlands inventory. okay. well, we looked it up. plugged in coordinates that the federal epa gave us. and our property is not in the epa s inventory. the epa stated the wetlands inventory is not always correct. this is our federal governmen