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<br />region. Therefore, HIPLEX has field facilities and research staffs <br />at three sites: Miles City, in eastern Montana; the Goodland-Colby <br />area of northwest Kansas; and the Big Spring-Snyder area of west- <br />central Texas. These sites also test three methods of project <br />management: (1) in Montana, the site director is a Bureau employee <br />assigned full time to Miles City; (2) in Kansas, the site director <br />is a contractor who reports directly to the Bureau; and (3) in <br />Texas, the site director is a subcontractor who reports to the Texas <br />Department of Water Resources, the Bureau's prime contractor for that <br />area. <br /> <br />Formal HIPLEX field activities began in 1975 following a limited <br />program of radar and photographic observations in Miles City in 1974. <br />The first 3 years' effort was directed toward developing a more <br />thorough climatology of High Plains cloud and precipitation charac- <br />teristics; improved understanding of the physics of natural clouds; <br />and development and testing instrument networks, equipment systems, <br />and operational procedures. Seeding calibration studies investigated <br />crystal development due to seeding. By the end of the 1977 field <br />season, a comprehensive, high quality data base had been acquired. <br /> <br />A series of workshops and technical conferences on HIPLEX issues <br />began in July 1974. In December 1977, the HIPLEX Design Workshop <br />focused on the scientific basis for a randomized experimental pro- <br />gram, defining the operational procedures, measurements, and analyti- <br />cal techniques required to evaluate hypotheses. The availability of <br />suitable facilities and experimentation to perform required measure- <br />ments were also assessed. Workshop participants agreed that current <br />understanding is sufficient to permit a randomized experiment in 1979 <br />at Miles City. Knowledge of cloud and precipitation processes in <br />small cumulus congestus clouds in Montana and the ability to measure <br />pertinent variables are adequate to support the experiment. <br /> <br />The 1978 activities in Montana emphasized descriptions and measure- <br />ments of primary variables that show the effects of seeding, deter- <br />mination of appropriate seeding rates, and development of specific <br />statistical and physical evaluation techniques. Based on data <br />analyses, a practical seeding hypotheses for cumulus congestus clouds <br />has been developed. Activities in Kansas and Texas continued to <br />focus on collection and analysis of cloud and precipitation data to <br />develop as thorough a seeding climatology as possible. <br /> <br />The States of Montana, Kansas, and Texas are sponsoring studies to <br />learn the advantages and possible disadvantages of additional rain- <br />fall to the economy, the environment, social considerations, and <br />water supplies. Agricultural, municipal,~ industrial, and recrea- <br />tional uses are also considered. Citizens in HIPLEX areas, local <br />civic groups, and Government agencies are working together to deter- <br />mine public needs and concerns. <br /> <br />111-2 <br />