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Urban land use /Murray, Phillip Dominic. January 1990 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M. Env. St.)--University of Adelaide, Centre for Environmental Studies, 1991. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 138-143).
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Seasonal relationships between dissolved nitrogen and landuse/landcover and soil drainage at multiple spatial scales in the Calapooia Watershed, Oregon /Floyd, William C. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Oregon State University, 2006. / Printout. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 101-109). Also available on the World Wide Web.
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Water Quality Indicators in Watershed Subbasins with Multiple Land UsesAull, Malia Elizabeth. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.) -- Worcester Polytechnic Institute. / Keywords: water quality; fecal coliforms; land use. Includes bibliographical references (p. 80-83).
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Evaluation of land application of wastewater as a nutrient reduction control strategy in the Chesapeake Bay watershedWilliams, Marlyse K. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (M.C.E.)--University of Delaware, 2006. / Principal faculty advisor: William Ritter, Dept. of Civil & Environmental Engineering. Includes bibliographical references.
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Locomotor kinematics of turtles moving in shallow water environmentsMazouchova, Nicole January 2019 (has links)
Locomotion, moving around in our complex world is as crucial to many animals as finding food, shelter or a mate. The intricate interplay between the brain, nerves, muscles, tendons and bones allows for a variety of gaits. Animal movement has been studied in many environments like water, land or air, often focusing on one habitat alone. These studies were crucial in establishing the principles of animal locomotion, but don’t always reflect the intricate lifestyle of an animal. More often then not, animals will encounter different surface structures (such as grass, sand, soil, forest debris) or even interact between different habitats, such as at the water-land interface. Fewer studies have focused on understanding how movement changes when physical conditions vary. A turtle swimming in a dense, buoyancy-dominated water habitat transitioning to a walking on gravity-dominated terrestrial habitat is poorly understood and may open insight into new locomotor strategies. Turtles are an interesting study subject to study water-land transitions, as their spines are fused to their carapace, isolating any movement generation to their limbs only. In this thesis, I chose different size red-eared slider (Trachemys scripta elegans) turtles to investigate their locomotion during discreet water depth, as well as during shallow water locomotion and investigated whether bone shape can be predictive of the environment they live in. / Biology
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Stream DOC, nitrate, chloride and SUVA response to land use during winter baseflow conditions in sub-basins of the Willamette River Basin, OR /Frentress, Jason. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Oregon State University, 2011. / Printout. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 69-74). Also available on the World Wide Web.
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Land-cut Versus Landfill As An Alternative For Creating Urban Space On WaterfrontsYazici, Murat 01 May 2010 (has links) (PDF)
The main concern of this thesis is to evaluate the land-cut as an alternative
urban design tool instead of landfill in the creation of shore in waterfront
areas in terms of improving space quality, increasing the shoreline length for
the use and benefit of public, decreasing the risks of natural disasters while
increasing the marine ecosystem and habitat, and promoting the
development of the land economy.
The development of the idea dates back to an urban design studio study
carried out in 2005 in Eceabat, Ç / anakkale by Middle East Technical
University Urban Design Master Program. During the study, it was observed
that the interaction of small town of Eceabat with water was partially blocked
by a seaside road and a ferry port created by landfill. Therefore, the ways of
integrating the town life with water was searched and in the design schemes
proposed after the analyses, the possibility to create a new shore by land-cut
method in Eceabat was evaluated.
Within this framework, the possibility of using land-cut method is evaluated in
a more detailed case study of KuSdili Meadow and KuSdili Stream (Kurbagali
v
Dere) located in Kadikö / y, Istanbul where there is a potential to create urban
space with an approach which has not been used so far in Turkey.
Prior to the analysis, the life near waterside has been studied in order to
clarify how people from different geographies developed settlements near
waterside and how those settlements existed with water.
The reasons and the problematic of landfill has been evaluated with specific
examples in order to put forward from what aspects the use of an alternative
method be considered is necessary. Therefore, the legal and administrative
aspects which resulted in the creation of landfills as problematic spaces on
the waterside have also been discussed.
At the end of the study, the potentiality of the site has been studied to find out
from various urban design aspects with a specific reference to the
applicability of land-cut method. Therefore, the analysis of the site has been
carried out. And the thesis has shown that land-cut may possibly be an
alternative to landfill in the development of waterside urban spaces from
various spatial, social, and economic aspects.
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Descent of the Deities: The Water-Land Retreat and the Transformation of the Visual Culture of Song-Dynasty (960-1279) BuddhismBloom, Phillip Emmanual 25 September 2013 (has links)
This dissertation identifies a paradox at the heart of the visual culture of Song-dynasty (960-1279) Buddhism. On the one hand, as the celestial pantheon expanded, it was conceptualized in ever more bureaucratic ways, mirroring the growth of the terrestrial government itself. On the other hand, the boundary separating that supramundane realm from the human world became decidedly more permeable; ghosts and deities became an omnipresent part of daily life. How to treat these two contradictory phenomena--one pointing to rational orderliness, the other pointing to unpredictable unruliness--posed a distinct problem for Song visual artists, spurring the development of new strategies of pictorial representation and forcing reflection upon the nature of representation itself. Chinese Buddhist art was never to be the same again. I argue that the key to understanding these new forms of art lies in the Water-Land Retreat (Shuilu zhai), a massive, icon-filled ritual of decidedly cosmic pretensions. The patterns of practice and strategies of visual representation associated with this ritual constitute a system that radically broke with earlier Chinese tradition. Practitioners of the liturgy created an open ritual syntax that allowed it to take on myriad forms in accordance with its sponsors’ needs, while also allowing it to absorb deities and practices from non-Buddhist traditions. This dissertation examines these phenomena in three parts. Part 1 excavates the social place, methods of practice, and visual profile of the Water-Land Retreat in and around the Song. Relying extensively on paintings from the Jiangnan region, cliff carvings from Sichuan, and numerous liturgical manuscripts, I argue that image and practice are inextricably bound in this ritual. Part 2 focuses on the motif of the cloud in Water-Land-related images and texts. Through an examination of images of cloud-borne descending deities, I contend that this nebulous motif became the locus for reflection on the mediational nature of representation. Finally, Part 3 addresses the bureaucratization of ritual practice and pictorial production in Song Buddhism. I argue that practitioners of the Water-Land Retreat simultaneously embraced and transcended a bureaucratic idiom drawn from Daoism and contemporary government to create a new Buddhist vision of the cosmos. / History of Art and Architecture
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General method of procedure in the working out of the Uncompahgre Valley Project, ColoradoFoster, Leo J. January 1909 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Missouri, School of Mines and Metallurgy, 1909. / The entire thesis text is included in file. Typescript. Title from title screen of thesis/dissertation PDF file (viewed April 16, 2009)
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Metal Mining's Environmental Pressures: A Review and Updated Estimates on CO2 Emissions, Water Use, and Land RequirementsTost, Michael, Bayer, Benjamin, Hitch, Michael, Lutter, Franz Stephan, Moser, Peter, Feiel, Susanne January 2018 (has links) (PDF)
The significant increase in metal mining and the inevitability of the continuation of this trend suggests that environmental pressures, as well as related impacts, have become an issue of global relevance. Yet the scale of the impact remains, to a large extent, unknown. This paper examines the mining sector's demands on CO2 emissions, water use, as well as demands on land use focusing on four principal metals: iron, aluminium (i.e., bauxite ore), copper, and gold. These materials represent a large proportion of all metallic materials mined in terms of crude tonnage and economic value. This paper examines how the main providers of mining data, the United Nations, government sources of some main metal producing and consuming countries, the scientific literature, and company reports report environmental pressures in these three areas. The authors conclude that, in the global context, the pressure brought about by metal mining is relatively low. The data on this subject are still very limited and there are significant gaps in consistency on criteria such as boundary descriptions, input parameter definitions, and allocation method descriptions as well as a lack of commodity and/or site specific reporting of environmental data at a company level.
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