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Books > Earth & environment > Earth sciences > The hydrosphere > General
Rivers are significant geomorphological agents, they show an
amazing diversity of form and behaviour and transfer water and
sediment from the land surface to the oceans. This book examines
how river systems respond to environmental change and why this
understanding is needed for successful river management. Highly
dynamic in nature, river channels adjust and evolve over timescales
that range from hours to tens of thousands of years or more, and
are found in a wide range of environments. This book provides a
comprehensive overview of recent developments in river channel
management, clearly illustrating why an understanding of fluvial
geomorphology is vital in channel preservation, environmentally
sensitive design and the restoration of degraded river channels. It
covers: flow and sediment regimes: flow generation; flow regimes;
sediment sources, transfer and yield channel processes: flow
characteristics; processes of erosion and sediment transport;
interactions between flow and the channel boundary; deposition
channel form and behaviour: controls on channel form; channel
adjustments; floodplain development; form and behaviour of alluvial
and bedrock channels response to change: how channels have
responded to past environmental change; impacts of human activity;
reconstructing past changes river management: the fluvial
hydrosystem; environmental degradation; environmentally sensitive
engineering techniques; river restoration; the role of the fluvial
geomorphologist. Fundamentals of Fluvial Geomorphology is an
indispensable text for undergraduate students. It provides
straightforward explanations for important concepts and
mathematical formulae, backed up with conceptual diagrams and
appropriate examples from around the world to show what they
actually mean and why they are important. A colour plate section
also shows spectacular examples of fluvial diversity.
Earth Observation for Flood Applications: Progress and Perspectives
describes the latest scientific advances in Earth Observation. With
recent floods around the world becoming ever more devastating,
there is a need for better science enabling more effective
solutions at a fast pace. This book aims at stretching from the
current flood mapping to diverse real data so as to estimate the
flood risk and damage. Earth Observation for Flood Applications:
Progress and Perspectives includes three parts containing each a
separate but complementary topic area under floods. Each chapter
unfolds various applications, case studies, and illustrative
graphics. In terms of flood mapping and monitoring, the usage of
multi-sensor satellite data, web-services information, microwave
remote sensing methods are discussed in depth. So, this book is a
valuable resource for scientists, researchers, and students in the
area of earth observation.
Drought Challenges: Livelihood Implications in Developing
Countries, Volume Two, provides an understanding of the occurrence
and impacts of droughts for developing countries and vulnerable
sub-groups, such as women and pastoralists. It presents tools for
assessing vulnerabilities, introduces individual policies to combat
the effects of droughts, and highlights the importance of
integrated multi-sectoral approaches and drought networks at
various levels. Currently, there are few books on the market that
address the growing need for knowledge on these cross-cutting
issues. As drought can occur anywhere, the systemic connections
between droughts and livelihoods are a key factor in development in
many dryland and agriculturally-dependent nations.
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On Water
(Paperback)
Nellie Wilder
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Discovery Miles 2 440
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This book introduces students to bodies of water. Students will
learn about the different bodies of water that are found on Earth.
With images that are easy to identify and clear, simple sentence
structures, this science reader simplifies scientific concepts for
young students as they improve their reading skills. A fun and easy
science experiment and Your Turn! activity provide more in-depth
opportunities for additional learning. Nonfiction text features
include a glossary and an index. Engage students in learning with
this dynamic text!
Extreme Hydrology and Climate Variability: Monitoring, Modelling,
Adaptation and Mitigation is a compilation of contributions by
experts from around the world who discuss extreme hydrology topics,
from monitoring, to modeling and management. With extreme climatic
and hydrologic events becoming so frequent, this book is a critical
source, adding knowledge to the science of extreme hydrology.
Topics covered include hydrometeorology monitoring, climate
variability and trends, hydrological variability and trends,
landscape dynamics, droughts, flood processes, and extreme events
management, adaptation and mitigation. Each of the book's chapters
provide background and theoretical foundations followed by
approaches used and results of the applied studies. This book will
be highly used by water resource managers and extreme event
researchers who are interested in understanding the processes and
teleconnectivity of large-scale climate dynamics and extreme
events, predictability, simulation and intervention measures.
Integrated Approaches to Sustainable Watershed Management in Xeric
Environments: A Training Manual provides the reader with the tools
they need to understand an integrated approach to watershed
management. The book presents a conceptual framework of water
management based on the authors' vast experience. Topics covered
include a scientific background of watershed management and the
integration of geohydraulic and socioeconomic factors. Key points
are further enhanced with case studies, problem sets, Bayesian
Networks and quizzes to educate watershed managers, industry
professionals and agencies. Authored by a team of leaders in the
field who are responsible for groundbreaking research in the area,
this book draws on their experience synthesizing scientific,
practical, on the ground expertise. This is an essential tool for
researchers and professionals in environmental, water or natural
resource management.
From Catchment Management to Managing River Basins: Science,
Technology Choices, Institutions and Policy synthesizes key
scientific facts crucial for catchment assessment, planning and
river basin water accounting. The book presents extensive reviews
of international literature on catchment hydrology, forest
hydrology and other hydrological processes, such as
groundwater-surface water interactions. It discusses not only the
science of catchment assessment and planning, but also the
catchment planning process. It documents several of the positive
international experiences with integrated catchment management and
integrated basin management, distilling key learnings. Case studies
from India and other parts of South Asia are also included, along
with new pilot studies. Finally, the book discusses the theoretical
and operational aspects of integrated catchment management and
integrated water management in river basins using international
best practices and case studies.
The authors, as geologists, were endowed with the fortune of
working in Geomatics technology comprising Remote Sensing, GIS,
GPS, etc. with a focused vision to bring out the Quaternary
geological history of different parts of Indian Peninsular, the
senior author during the last four decades and the co-authors
during the last one and half decades. As geomorphology, one of the
major branch of geology, not only dealing with external landscape
architecture of the planet earth but also bears the records on the
Quaternary tectonics, riverine, coastal, aeolian, glacial, volcanic
and other geomorphic processes of the Quaternary period, the
authors were stimulated to carry out studies on the riverine life
histories, shoreline changes and offshore land building phenomena,
the recent earth movements from the geomorphic anomalies, Holocene
tectonics and their control over Quaternary deltas, etc. Besides
unfurling the geological history of the Quaternary period,
geomorphology has been deeply studied by the authors with the focus
on mapping and mitigation of natural disasters like
seismotectonics, landslides, response of coastal geomorphology to
tsunami surges, floods, etc.
The continental hydrological cycle is one of the least understood
components of the climate system. The understanding of the
different processes involved is important in the fields of
hydrology and meteorology. In this volume the main applications for
continental hydrology are presented, including the characterization
of the states of continental surfaces (water state, snow cover,
etc.) using active and passive remote sensing, monitoring the
Antarctic ice sheet and land water surface heights using radar
altimetry, the characterization of redistributions of water masses
using the GRACE mission, the potential of GNSS-R technology in
hydrology, and remote sensing data assimilation in hydrological
models. This book, part of a set of six volumes, has been produced
by scientists who are internationally renowned in their fields. It
is addressed to students (engineers, Masters, PhD) , engineers and
scientists, specialists in remote sensing applied to hydrology.
Through this pedagogical work, the authors contribute to breaking
down the barriers that hinder the use of Earth observation data.
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