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Matt Podbury

Much Of US South Experiencing Extreme Drought - Let The Water Wars Begin : TreeHugger - 0 views

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    Competing demands for water - Water Wars, USA
Matt Podbury

The Habitable Planet Unit 8 - Water Resources // Online Textbook - 0 views

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    Competing demands for water
Matt Podbury

BBC News | MIDDLE EAST | Water conflict in Middle East - 0 views

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    Israel - competing demands for water on a national scale
Ian Gabrielson

River fieldwork - 3 views

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    "Hydraulic radius = cross sectional area / wetted perimeter. Hydraulic radius is a measure of the efficiency of the the river channel. The higher the hydraulic radius, the more efficient the river channel is. The more efficient the river is, the more energy the water will have to move downstream (so as hydraulic radius increases, velocity increases) carry load (so as hydraulic radius increases, the river's competence and capacity increases) increase the rate of erosion (in the upper course, as hydraulic radius increases, there is a higher rate of vertical erosion, so gradient increases; further downstream where the river is closer to base level, as hydraulic radius increases, there is a higher rate of lateral erosion)."
Matt Podbury

When wellsprings run dry - 0 views

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    Competing demands for Water - Israel/Palestine
Matt Podbury

BBC News | World | World water crisis - 0 views

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    Excellent interactive study site from BBC to show competing demands for water globally. Satisfies point 4 of the Freshwater syllabus.
Matt Podbury

YouTube - Blue Gold: World Water Wars 1/6 Water Documentary (2009) - 0 views

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    Competing Demands for Water - Blue Gold. Part 1 of 6
Richard Allaway

geographyalltheway.com - AS / A2 / IB Geography - Competing Demands for Water - 1 views

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    Using the Everglades, USA Updated Nov 2011
Ian Gabrielson

Save the Mekong - 0 views

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    An excellent website that looks at the key issues surrounding building Dams upstream on the Mekong. Good for international and local conflicts
Ian Gabrielson

Five Controversial Dams ~ Introduction | Wide Angle | PBS - 3 views

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    "For many developing countries hungry for energy sources, hydropower is an attractive option. But dams also can place heavy burdens on surrounding populations and eco-systems. While China touts its Three Gorges dam - the world's largest - as environmentally friendly, the United States has begun tearing down a number of its own structures for safety, economic, and environmental reasons. To broaden your knowledge of dams around the world, explore below the economic, environmental, social, and political aspects of five big dam projects in Turkey, Brazil, Laos, Lesotho, and China. "
graham maltby

Snowy Flow Response Monitoring and Modelling program - NSW Office of Water - 0 views

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    he Snowy Mountains Scheme has affected the ecology of Snowy Mountain rivers and streams. The Snowy Water Inquiry identified the need to increase flows to the Snowy River below Jindabyne and the Snowy montane rivers.
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