Land Subsidence and the Reservoirs of the Washburn Valley
Water management can have profound effects upon the landscape.
Water management can have profound effects upon the landscape.
Aquatic dead zones result from pollution caused by excessive fertilizer runoff and wastewater discharge. Their number and extent are increasing.
Brisbane’s 1893 floods shaped water policy in southeast Queensland, creating a dependency on dams.
In 1947, inhabitants of Yakutsk gained access to potable groundwater from below the permafrost layer for the first time.
This article examines mobilization and resistance against pollution in the Alviela River in the Santarém municipality, Portugal, since the 1950s.
Efforts to naturalize trout in German Southwest Africa capture German ambitions within its first and only settler colony.
This article investigates the transition of water supply in Bangalore, where wells were gradually replaced by piped water.
In 1966, a stray beluga whale swimming up and down the polluted Lower Rhine caught the media’s attention in West Germany.
The urbanization of Bangalore transformed the once-strong relationship between communities and the lakes that they once created and maintained.
The transformation of the Sampangi Lake into the present-day Sri Kanteerava Stadium.