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Books > Earth & environment
Emerging Contaminants in the Environment: Challenges and
Sustainable Practices covers all aspects of emerging contaminants
in the environment, from basic understanding to different types of
emerging contaminants and how these threaten organisms, their
environmental fate studies, detection methods, and sustainable
practices of dealing with contaminants. Emerging contaminant
remediation is a pressing need due to the ever-increasing pollution
in the environment, and it has gained a lot of scientific and
public attention due to its high effectiveness and sustainability.
The discussions in the book on the bioremediation of these
contaminants are covered from the perspective of proven
technologies and practices through case studies and real-world
data. One of the main benefits of this book is that it summarizes
future challenges and sustainable solutions. It can, therefore,
become an effective guide to the elimination (through sustainable
practices) of emerging contaminants. At the back of these
explorations on sustainable bioremediation of emerging contaminants
lies the set of 17 goals articulated by the United Nations in its
2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, adopted by all its member
states. This book provides academics, researchers, students, and
practitioners interested in the detection and elimination of
emerging contaminants from the environment, with the latest
advances by leading experts in emerging contaminants the field of
environmental sciences.
Microbiome Under Changing Climate: Implications and Solutions
presents the latest biotechnological interventions for the
judicious use of microbes to ensure optimal agricultural yield.
Summarizing aspects of vulnerability, adaptation and amelioration
of climate impact, this book provides an important resource for
understanding microbes, plants and soil in pursuit of sustainable
agriculture and improved food security. It emphasizes the
interaction between climate and soil microbes and their potential
role in promoting advanced sustainable agricultural solutions,
focusing on current research designed to use beneficial microbes
such as plant growth promoting microorganisms, fungi, endophytic
microbes, and more. Changes in climatic conditions influence all
factors of the agricultural ecosystem, including adversely
impacting yield both in terms of quantity and nutritional quality.
In order to develop resilience against climatic changes, it is
increasingly important to understand the effect on the native
micro-flora, including the distribution of methanogens and
methanotrophs, nutrient content and microbial biomass, among
others.
Energy Communities explores core potential systemic benefits and
costs in engaging consumers into communities, particularly relating
to energy transition. The book evaluates the conditions under which
energy communities might be regarded as customer-centered,
market-driven and welfare-enhancing. The book also reviews the
issue of prevalence and sustainability of energy communities and
whether these features are likely to change as opportunities for
distributed energy grow. Sections cover the identification of
welfare considerations for citizens and for society on a local and
national level, and from social, economic and ecological
perspectives, while also considering different community designs
and evolving business models.
Ken Jennings takes readers on a world tour of geogeeks from the
London Map Fair to the bowels of the Library of Congress, from the
prepubescent geniuses at the National Geographic Bee to the
computer programmers at Google Earth. Each chapter delves into a
different aspect of map culture: highpointing, geocaching, road
atlas rallying, even the "unreal estate" charted on the maps of
fiction and fantasy. Jennings also considers the ways in which
cartography has shaped our history, suggesting that the impulse to
make and read maps is as relevant today as it has ever been.
From the "Here be dragons" parchment maps of the Age of Discovery
to the spinning globes of grade school to the postmodern revolution
of digital maps and GPS, "Maphead "is filled with intriguing
details, engaging anecdotes, and enlightening analysis. If you're
an inveterate map lover yourself--or even if you're among the
cartographically clueless who can get lost in a supermarket--let
Ken Jennings be your guide to the strange world of mapheads.
Landscape is never static, but changes continuously when seen in
relation to human occupation, movement, labor, and discourse.
Contested Territory explores the ways in which Peru's early
colonial landscapes were experienced and portrayed, especially by
the Spanish conquerors but also by their conquered subjects. It
focuses on the role played by indigenous groups in shaping the
Spanish experiences of landscapes, the diverse geographical images
of Peru and ways in which these were constructed and contested, and
what this can tell us about the nature of colonial relations in
post-conquest Peru. This exceptional study, which draws from
archival records and sources such as cartographies, offers a richly
nuanced view of the complexity of colonial relations. It will be
read with appreciation by those interested in Spanish history,
geography, and colonialism.
Hybrid and Combined Processes for Air Pollution Control:
Methodologies, Mechanisms and Effect of Key Parameters provides an
exhaustive inventory of hybrid and combined processes in the field
of air treatment. The book covers principles, the effect of key
parameters, technologies and reactors of the processes and their
implementation, from lab-scale to industrial scale, also
identifying future trends. Sections discuss effects on the
environment and living beings, identify novel techniques and
innovations, and offer a thorough assessment of the strengths and
weaknesses of each. In this well-structured book, chapters are
linked to the type of treatment, with a significant part dealing
with treatment by transfer processes: (absorption and absorption)
and on destruction treatments, such as advanced oxidation
processes.
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