diff --git a/src/assets/text/metaAnalysisText.js b/src/assets/text/metaAnalysisText.js
index a5018365121fb90f15947ac9a8bc3c4cbaac2ff1..84b1c52aefebb28b86af16d11dac7c585c3c9286 100644
--- a/src/assets/text/metaAnalysisText.js
+++ b/src/assets/text/metaAnalysisText.js
@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@ export default {
   metaAnalysisText: {
     title: "Meta-analysis of social vulnerability to water insecurity ",
     paragraph1: "Line thickness = how much evidence do we have that the determinant or indicator contributes to water insecurity ",
-    paragraph2: "In 2023, the USGS Social and Economic Drivers Program (SED, for short) and partners in the USGS Integrated Information Dissemination Division (IIDD) conducted a meta-analysis of studies that measured factors of social vulnerability associated with conditions of water insecurity. A meta-analysis is a type of review study, where researchers combine data from many different studies to try to identify bigger patterns across all the results. The team focused their analysis on studies published between 2000 and 2022 that took place in the conterminous United States (lower 48 states) west of the Mississippi River. The Western states face a slew of water availability challenges, including increasing population growth, dependence on groundwater, and generally low precipitation (see <a href='https://pubs.usgs.gov/circ/2005/circ1261/pdf/C1261.pdf' target='_blank'>Anderson and Woosley 2005</a> for a discussion of water availability in the Western United States). But not all populations across the West  experience the same levels of water insecurity.",
+    paragraph2: "In 2023, the USGS Social and Economic Drivers Program (SED, for short) and partners in the USGS Integrated Information Dissemination Division (IIDD) conducted a meta-analysis of studies that measured factors of social vulnerability associated with conditions of water insecurity. A meta-analysis is a type of review study, where researchers combine data from many different studies to try to identify bigger patterns across all the results. The team focused their analysis on studies published between 2000 and 2022 that took place in the conterminous United States (lower 48 states) west of the Mississippi River <a href='https://www.sciencebase.gov/catalog/item/63f79d49d34e4f7eda456572' target='_blank'>(Hines and others 2023)</a>. The Western states face a slew of water availability challenges, including increasing population growth, dependence on groundwater, and generally low precipitation (see <a href='https://pubs.usgs.gov/circ/2005/circ1261/pdf/C1261.pdf' target='_blank'>Anderson and Woosley 2005</a> for a discussion of water availability in the Western United States). But not all populations across the West  experience the same levels of water insecurity.",
     paragraph3: "“The goal of our meta-analysis was to provide baseline metrics supporting the development of a set of indicators describing social vulnerability of key water-use sectors (agricultural and municipal) to conditions of water insecurity,” explains Oronde Drakes, social geographer and lead author of the meta-analysis. “This includes understanding the inherent vulnerabilities of populations dependent on these water-use sectors as well as those decision-making processes that can exacerbate vulnerabilities.”",
     paragraph4: "What the SED-IIDD team found was that a small subset of social vulnerability indicators was not only studied a lot but was consistently associated with water insecurity. Multiple demographic characteristics (age, race/ethnicity, family structure, gender, and language proficiency), dependence on specific sources and uses of water, wealth, and exposure to water-related hazards all had large amounts of evidence and high levels of agreement for their influence on water insecurity."
   }
diff --git a/src/assets/text/referencesText.js b/src/assets/text/referencesText.js
index 3693bd3523e54b23ceed368da82fa3a8c8630bc3..363674046f0610db5258e8b312139794a0e45582 100644
--- a/src/assets/text/referencesText.js
+++ b/src/assets/text/referencesText.js
@@ -15,6 +15,16 @@ export default {
       {
         reference: 'Reference TKTK',
         num: '2',
+        authors: 'Hines, M.K., Drakes, O.O., Restrepo-Osorio., D.L., and Powlen, K.A.',
+        year: '2023',
+        title: 'Literature Summary of Indicators of Water Vulnerability in the Western US 2000-2022',
+        link: 'https://www.sciencebase.gov/catalog/item/63f79d49d34e4f7eda456572',
+        type: 'U.S. Geological Survey data release',
+        ref: 'https://doi.org/10.5066/P93IDTUZ'
+      },
+      {
+        reference: 'Reference TKTK',
+        num: '3',
         authors: 'Anderson, M. T., & Woosley, L. H',
         year: '2005',
         title: 'Water availability for the western United States: key scientific challenges',