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AcknowledgmentsThe development and application of the Upper Fox model depended on contributions from several groups of scientists.At the U.S. Geological Survey, Richard Niswonger provided indispensable assistance in facilitating the use of the recently released MODFLOW-NWT code. John Walker furnished base-flow estimates and statistical support. David M. Ely and David Pollock reviewed the report and it benefited greatly from their remarks. Bobbie Louthian provided a thorough editorial review supplemented by insightful comments from John Eggleston.The funding for the project originated in a grant from the Brico Fund (Milwaukee, Wisconsin). Peter McAvoy, now adjunct at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (UWM) School of Freshwater Science, helped coordinate the research and shape the research strategy. At UWM, Professors Douglas Cherkauer (emeritus) and Timothy Grundl were closely involved with every step of model development and application -their participation was essential. As part of her graduate work for Prof. Cherkauer, Bonnie Bills tirelessly compiled and interpreted well logs and surface-water data. The project also benefited from geophysical investigations conducted by Prof. William Kean (emeritus) and his graduate student, Michael Baierlipp.Several members of the Wisconsin groundwater community provided vital information for the project:• John Jansen (Cardno ENTRIX) and Ted Powell (Ruekert and Mielke, Inc.) located and forwarded pumping test and other records; John also offered good suggestions on modeling approaches;• Michael Hahn (Southeastern Wisconsin Regional Planning Commission) and representatives of the Waukesha Water Utility provided important hydrogeologic and water-use data;• Researchers at the Wisconsin Geological and Natural History Survey (Kenneth Bradbury, Madeline Gotkowitz, and David Hart) were, as always, helpful in talking through ideas. Target
AbstractThe Fox River is a 199-mile-long tributary to the Illinois River within the Mississippi River Basin in the states of Wisconsin and Illinois. For the purposes of this study the Upper Fox River Basin is defined as the topographic basin that extends from the upstream boundary of the Fox River Basin to a large wetland complex in south-central Waukesha County called the Vernon Marsh. The objectives for the study are to (1) develop a baseli...