The arid but fertile San Joaquin Valley yielded fortunes for whoever owned the water that trickled down from the neighboring Sierra Nevada Mountains. Landowners avidly brought lawsuits seeking rulings that would favorably define stream flows, property boundaries, and economic uses of water. Oddly, California courts followed the legal doctrine of the eastern rather than neighboring western states, upholding the riparian claims of those who owned land bordering a river rather than prior appropriators who discovered and first used the water. Riparian law laid the foundation for the enormous cattle company, Miller and Lux. During its heyday between 1870 and 1930 the firm battled relentlessly in courts, the state political arena, and private...
At last we have a review of Texas water issues worthy of the name! Andrew Sansom’s Water in Texas: A...
With this bibliography Professors Jacobstein and Mersky have made a major scholarly contribution—not...
In Dividing New Mexico\u27s Waters, 1700-1912, John O. Baxter examines New Mexico\u27s sordid water ...
Flooding the Courtrooms: Law and Water in the Far West. By M. Catherine Miller. (Lincoln: University...
Water touches the lives of all of us every day, and so, at least indirectly, do the rules that gover...
As one who took an early interest in the water rights of American Indian tribes (American Indian Wat...
A Review of The Great Thirst: Californians and Water, 1170s-1990s by Norris Hundley, Jr
This collection of essays on Indian water rights results from a symposium, Indian Water Rights and W...
The centrality of water scarcity on the region\u27s public agenda, the correlative need for preserva...
Donald Pisani\u27s collection of ten articles published between 1982 and 1994 and four section intro...
There is not enough space in this brief review to comment adequately upon the various papers. Both t...
Native Peoples and Water Rights constitutes a valuable collection of historical case studies that sh...
Read this volume if you want to know anything, nearly everything, about the history of water develop...
Opie presents a compelling story of maladapt ion on the Great Plains, along with great sympathy and ...
Dunbar does not address this thorny question. What has resulted is a remarkably useful survey of the...
At last we have a review of Texas water issues worthy of the name! Andrew Sansom’s Water in Texas: A...
With this bibliography Professors Jacobstein and Mersky have made a major scholarly contribution—not...
In Dividing New Mexico\u27s Waters, 1700-1912, John O. Baxter examines New Mexico\u27s sordid water ...
Flooding the Courtrooms: Law and Water in the Far West. By M. Catherine Miller. (Lincoln: University...
Water touches the lives of all of us every day, and so, at least indirectly, do the rules that gover...
As one who took an early interest in the water rights of American Indian tribes (American Indian Wat...
A Review of The Great Thirst: Californians and Water, 1170s-1990s by Norris Hundley, Jr
This collection of essays on Indian water rights results from a symposium, Indian Water Rights and W...
The centrality of water scarcity on the region\u27s public agenda, the correlative need for preserva...
Donald Pisani\u27s collection of ten articles published between 1982 and 1994 and four section intro...
There is not enough space in this brief review to comment adequately upon the various papers. Both t...
Native Peoples and Water Rights constitutes a valuable collection of historical case studies that sh...
Read this volume if you want to know anything, nearly everything, about the history of water develop...
Opie presents a compelling story of maladapt ion on the Great Plains, along with great sympathy and ...
Dunbar does not address this thorny question. What has resulted is a remarkably useful survey of the...
At last we have a review of Texas water issues worthy of the name! Andrew Sansom’s Water in Texas: A...
With this bibliography Professors Jacobstein and Mersky have made a major scholarly contribution—not...
In Dividing New Mexico\u27s Waters, 1700-1912, John O. Baxter examines New Mexico\u27s sordid water ...