ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING COURSE IN INDIA: It is a very popular discipline of engineering that deals with the issues related to the environment.
Hydrology is science of water, hydrology deals with occurrence, circulation of water and the distribution of water. It studies the way how water is circulated from sea to vapors then precipitation then infiltration, runoff and other similar activities that are taking place. This book titled “Handbook of Hydrology” includes bundles of scientific laws and observations
Your introduction to Earth science: geology, geophysics, glaciology, volcanology, hydrology and oceanography, atmospheric science, and geochemistry.
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This post covers; what Is hydrology, the importance of hydrology, the impact of humans on water conditions, and how to improve water quality.
This Book examines Indian views of causality such as the doctrine of pre-existence of effect known as (Satkaryavada) and its theory of evolution or modification known as (Parinamavada) with particular focus on the Sa khya Philosophy. Here I have more focused on the conceptual study of Satkaryavada as a doctrine of causality and the basic question raised in…
About this product Product Information Valued as a reference by professional civil engineers, land developers, public works officials, and land surveyors throughout the U.S., this book guides readers to an understanding of the concepts of hydraulics and surface water technology. Product Identifiers Publisher Delamr Cengage Learning ISBN-10 0766827941 ISBN-13 9780766827943 eBay Product ID (ePID) 1660536 Product Key Features Number of Pages 496 Pages Language English Publication Name Introduction to Hydraulics and Hydrology : with Applications for Stormwater Management Publication Year 2001 Subject Construction / General, Hydraulics, Earth Sciences / Hydrology, Technical & Manufacturing Industries & Trades Type Textbook Subject Area Technology & Engineering, Science Author John E. Gribbin Format Trade Paperback Dimensions Item Weight 39.1 Oz Item Length 11 in Item Width 8.7 in Additional Product Features Edition Number 2 LCCN 2001-028683 Dewey Edition 21 Target Audience College Audience Illustrated Yes Dewey Decimal 628/.21 Lc Classification Number Td657.G7523 2001 Table of Content Preface. Chapter1. Hydraulics and Hydrology in Engineering. Chapter2. Fluid Mechanics. Chapter3. Fundamental Hydrostatics. Chapter4. Fundamental Hydrodynamics. Chapter5. Hydraulic Devices. Chapter6. Open Channel Hydraulics. Chapter 7. Culvert Hydraulics. Chapter8. Fundamental Hydrology. Chapter9. Runoff Calculations. Chapter10. Storm Sewer Design. Chapter11. Culvert Design. Chapter12. Detention Design. Appendix A. Design Charts for Open Channel Flow. Appendix B. Design Charts for Culverts. Appendix C. Design Charts for Rational Method. Appendix D. Design Charts for SCS Method. Appendix E . Computer Software Applications for Stormwater Management. Appendix F. Glossary. Appendix G. Symbols. Appendix H. Unit Conversion. Index. Copyright Date 2002 Show More Show Less
Groundwater and surface water Some topics appear so basic that they should probably defy the abject stupidity of a run-of-the-mill freelancer, yet we've long since found out that if there is a web surfer dumb enough to ask a stupid question; there is always an eHow.com freelancer ready to pounce on the topic (for a fee, of course). Let's have a look today at water, a requirement for life as we know it. Some benighted OQ asked Google "How to Find Underground Water," and eHowian Sara Melone was quick to... well, "answer" doesn't quite have the right ring... at Sciencing.com. Melone, who seems to have zero background in hydrogeology (she has a BA in English), must have figured that it was a no-brainer; so she cobbled together an "answer" that fit that specification quite well. From the point where she chirped that the USGS says that, "[There] is over 2,000,000 mi3 of freshwater [sic] stored within a half mile of the earth's surface" to her suggestion that you call a dowser, Melone never once uttered the word "groundwater." Even though she cited a USGS article entitled "How to Find Underground Water," Melone repeated very little of the scientific information it contained. Instead, Sara babbled for several hundred words, including misstatements and half-true factoids like, "If you need to locate underground water for a residential well or other purpose, chances are that water exists below the surface of the land." Well sure, Sara, chances approach 100%: the questions a well-driller really needs to answer are how deep it is and how to get it out. Then there's this cogent observation: "The presence of certain plants and trees that gravitate toward water can also be a clue to the existence of underground water sources." Ummm, besides her misuse of "gravitate," what Sara should have said is something about the water being near the surface. There's more... "Use a common shovel or spade to dig several test holes five to seven feet in ground depth [sic]. Keep the test holes spaced at least four feet apart to help you determine if underground water may be present in one area and not another." That certainly bespeaks an ignorance of the concept of an aquifer! There's more... "Many professional water locators use special electroseismic [sic] equipment that sends seismic waves through the ground and detects the movement of any existing water below." Ummm, no, not the "movement" of water: what your resource said, Sara, is that you can use seismic techniques to determine the subsurface structure of any aquifers present. Melone's failure to comprehend what she read is typical of the scientifically illiterate freelancers who infested eHow.com, which is one reason why there are so many Dumbass of the Day recipients around around there. copyright © 2020-2023 scmrak SI - HYDROGEOLOGY
The World Bank has approved $175 million for Indias National Hydrology Project which will strengthen the capacity of existing institutions to assess the water situation and equip them with real-time flood forecast systems across the country.
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Germany’s Rhine river is getting too dry, snarling supply chains and creating more problems for its struggling economy.