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The Dilemma of Boundaries electronic resource Toward a New Concept of Catchment / edited by Makoto Taniguchi, Takayuki Shiraiwa.

By: Taniguchi, Makoto [editor.]Contributor(s): Shiraiwa, Takayuki [editor.] | SpringerLink (Online service)Material type: TextTextSeries: Global Environmental StudiesPublication details: Tokyo : Springer Japan : Imprint: Springer, 2012Description: XIII, 275 p. 82 illus., 47 illus. in color. online resourceContent type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9784431540359Subject(s): Environmental sciences | Hydraulic engineering | geography | Civil engineering | Environmental management | environment | Environment, general | Geography (general) | Hydrogeology | Environmental Management | Civil EngineeringDDC classification: 333.7 LOC classification: GE1-350Online resources: Click here to access online In: Springer eBooksSummary: Water circulates continuously and seamlessly on Earth with little regard for the boundaries we draw. There are natural boundaries as between land and ocean and surface and subsurface environments, as well as human or demographic boundaries between nations, cultures, and religions. Although considered necessary by societies, these human-created boundaries disrupt natural water circulation, leading to serious water-related environmental problems. The dilemma of how to manage water beyond our boundaries remains, and nations have different ways and means of controlling each form of water, whether as vapor, surface water, groundwater, or seawater. Recent findings on the interaction of water from land, oceans, and the atmosphere encourage researchers to undertake collaborative work that goes beyond the boundaries of each discipline, be it oceanography, surface and subsurface hydrology, climatology, or glaciology. Drawing on all these fields, the book focuses on two major boundaries: that between surface water and ground water, and that between terrestrial water and ocean water. This comprehensive work is of great value to experts in academia, international organizations, consulting firms, water resources, fisheries, and urban development planning agencies.
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Water circulates continuously and seamlessly on Earth with little regard for the boundaries we draw. There are natural boundaries as between land and ocean and surface and subsurface environments, as well as human or demographic boundaries between nations, cultures, and religions. Although considered necessary by societies, these human-created boundaries disrupt natural water circulation, leading to serious water-related environmental problems. The dilemma of how to manage water beyond our boundaries remains, and nations have different ways and means of controlling each form of water, whether as vapor, surface water, groundwater, or seawater. Recent findings on the interaction of water from land, oceans, and the atmosphere encourage researchers to undertake collaborative work that goes beyond the boundaries of each discipline, be it oceanography, surface and subsurface hydrology, climatology, or glaciology. Drawing on all these fields, the book focuses on two major boundaries: that between surface water and ground water, and that between terrestrial water and ocean water. This comprehensive work is of great value to experts in academia, international organizations, consulting firms, water resources, fisheries, and urban development planning agencies.

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