About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 110. Chapters: Aquifer, United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification, Evapotranspiration, Great Lakes Commission, Water table, Peak water, Constructed wetland, Daylighting, Water resources, Hydraulic fracturing, Water pollution, Reclaimed water, Paddy field, Riparian zone restoration, Groundwater, Connecticut River, Drainage basin, Blue Flag beach, Wetland conservation, Flood Control Act of 1928, Hydrological code, Buffer strip, Water distribution on Earth, Colorado River Compact, Land reclamation, WEPP, Great Lakes Protection Fund, International Water Management Institute, Riparian buffer, Saltwater intrusion, Watertable control, Stream restoration, Fluvial terrace, Water efficiency, Well drainage, Riparian water rights, Water-meadow, Watershed management, Landscape limnology, Groundwater recharge, Drainage system, Hydraulic redistribution, Water security, Hot stain, International Joint Commission, Wastewater quality indicators, Integrated Constructed Wetland, Colorado River Basin Salinity Control Act, Upland and lowland, GENESIS - Groundwater and Dependent Ecosystems, Susquehanna River Basin Commission, Drainage divide, Delaware River Basin Commission, Floodplain restoration, Grassed waterway, List of watershed topics, Water quality modelling, Depression-focused recharge, Stream gradient, Treatment wetland, Overdrafting, Bank, Aquifer Storage and Recovery, Soil plant atmosphere continuum, Water Conservation Order, Beach house, Hard engineering, Pt/Co scale, Relief ratio, Aridification, Sonde, Marine architecture. Excerpt: The term Peak Water has been put forward as a concept to help understand growing constraints on the availability, quality, and use of freshwater resources. The clearest definitions of the term were laid out in a 2010 peer-reviewed article in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences by Peter G...