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Modern Hydrology and Sustainable Water Development

S. K. Gupta (Physical Research Laboratory (PRL))

$165.95

Hardback

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English
Wiley-Blackwell
23 November 2010
The material of this book will derive its scientific under-pinning from basics of mathematics, physics, chemistry, geology, meteorology, engineering, soil science, and related disciplines and will provide sufficient breadth and depth of understanding in each sub-section of hydrology.   It will start with basic concepts:

Water, its properties, its movement, modelling and quality The distribution of water in space and time Water resource sustainability

Chapters on ‘global change’ and ‘water and ethics’ aim respectively to emphasize the central role of hydrological cycle and its quantitative understanding and monitoring for human well being and to familiarize the readers with complex issues of equity and justice in large scale water resource development process.

Modern Hydrology for Sustainable Development is intended not only as a textbook for students in earth and environmental science and civil engineering degree courses, but also as a reference for professionals in fields as diverse as environmental planning, civil engineering, municipal and industrial water supply, irrigation and catchment management.

By:  
Imprint:   Wiley-Blackwell
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 254mm,  Width: 196mm,  Spine: 29mm
Weight:   1.302kg
ISBN:   9781405171243
ISBN 10:   1405171243
Pages:   464
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  A / AS level ,  Further / Higher Education
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Foreword. Preface. Acknowledgements. A note for students and teachers. 1 Fundamentals of hydrology. 1.1 Properties of water. 1.2 Common water quality parameters. 1.3 Hydrologic cycle and global water distribution. 1.4 Units and dimensions. 1.5 Significant figures and digits. 2 Surface water hydrology. 2.1 Lakes. 2.2 Glaciers. 2.3 Streams. 2.4 Watershed concept. 2.5 Instrumentation and monitoring. 2.6 Runoff processes and flow measurement. 2.7 Rainfall-runoff analysis and modelling. 2.8 Stream processes. 2.9 Stream characteristics. 2.10 River and reservoir routing. 2.11 Scales and scaling. 2.12 The invisible resource: groundwater. 2.13 Tutorial. 3 Groundwater hydrology. 3.1 Occurrence of groundwater. 3.2 Movement of groundwater. 3.3 Hydraulic head. 3.4 Dispersion. 3.5 Specialized flow conditions. 3.6 Groundwater measurements. 3.7 Groundwater pollution. 3.8 Composite nature of surfacewater and groundwater. 3.9 Conjunctive use of surfacewater and groundwater. 3.10 Tutorial. 4 Well hydraulics and test pumping. 4.1 Steady flow. 4.2 Superposition in space and time. 4.3 Boundaries and images in flow modelling. 4.4 Well flow under special conditions. 4.5 Well losses. 4.6 Tutorial. 5 Surface and groundwater flow modelling. 5.1 Surface water flow modelling. 5.2 Groundwater flow modelling. 5.3 Surface and groundwater interactions and coupled/integrated modelling. 6 Aqueous chemistry and human impacts on water quality. 6.1 Principles and processes controlling composition of natural waters. 6.2 Natural hydrochemical conditions in the subsurface. 6.3 Presenting inorganic chemical data. 6.4 Impact of human activities. 6.5 Geochemical modelling. 6.6 Chemical tracers. 6.7 Groundwater – numerical modelling of solute transport. 6.8 Relation between use and quality of water. 6.9 Industrial use. 6.10 Tutorial. 7 Hydrologic tracing. 7.1 Isotopes and radioactivity. 7.2 Hydrologic tracers. 7.3 Tracers and groundwater movement. 7.4 Stable isotopes of oxygen and hydrogen. 7.5 Dissolved noble gases. 7.6 Models for interpretation of groundwater age. 7.7 Tracers for estimation of groundwater recharge. 7.8 Tutorial. 8 Statistical analyses in hydrology. 8.1 Descriptive statistics. 8.2 Probability theory. 8.3 Hydrologic frequency analysis. 8.4 Nonparametric density estimation methods. 8.5 Error analysis. 8.6 Time series analysis. 8.7 Tutorial. 9 Remote sensing and GIS in hydrology. 9.1 Principle of remote sensing. 9.2 Approaches to data/image interpretation. 9.3 Radar and microwave remote sensing. 9.4 Geographic Information Systems (GIS). 9.5 Applications in hydrology. 10 Urban hydrology. 10.1 Water balance in urban areas. 10.2 Disposal of waterborne wastes. 10.3 New approaches and technologies for sustainable urbanization. 11 Rainwater harvesting and artificial groundwater recharge. 11.1 Historical perspective. 11.2 Rainwater harvesting – some general remarks. 11.3 Watershed management and water harvesting. 11.4 Tutorial. 12 Water resource development: the human dimensions. 12.1 The global water crisis. 12.2 Global initiatives. 12.3 Water and ethics. 12.4 Global water tele-connections and virtual water. 13 Some case studies. 13.1 The Yellow River Basin, China. 13.2 The Colorado River Basin, United States. 13.3 The Murray-Darling River Basin, Australia. 13.4 The North Gujarat–Cambay region, Western India. 14 Epilogue. 14.1 Water and its properties, quality considerations, movement, and modelling of surface- and groundwater. 14.2 Distribution of water in space and time. 14.3 Water resource sustainability. Bibliography. Index. Plate section.

Dr. S.K. Gupta has more than 150 publications in internationally refereed research journals and several books to his credit. Dr. Gupta has also been a Fulbright Fellow at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, an Alexander von Humboldt Fellow at the University of Heidelberg, and a Visiting Fellow at the University of Canberra. He is a Fellow of the National Academy of Sciences, India.

Reviews for Modern Hydrology and Sustainable Water Development

The material of this book will derive its scientific under-pinning from basics of mathematics, physics, chemistry, geology, meteorology, engineering, soil science, and related disciplines and will provide sufficient breadth and depth of understanding in each sub-section of hydrology. (Environmental Expert, 8 March 2011)


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