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  • 1: Erweiterte Suche Autor, Körperschaft: Meincke, Jens   :   (Online-Artikel)  —  0 Treffer    Suche wiederholen Permalink feed icon
  • 2: Erweiterte Suche Autor, Körperschaft: Balzer, Wolfgang   :   (Online-Artikel)  —  0 Treffer    Suche wiederholen Permalink feed icon
  • 3: Erweiterte Suche Autor, Körperschaft: Khan, Anish   :   (Online-Artikel)  —  0 Treffer    Suche wiederholen Permalink feed icon
  • 4: Erweiterte Suche Autor, Körperschaft: Flueh, Ernst R.   :   (Online-Artikel)  —  0 Treffer    Suche wiederholen Permalink feed icon
  • 5: Erweiterte Suche Autor, Körperschaft: Cheshmehzangi, Ali   :   —  0 Treffer    Suche wiederholen Permalink feed icon
  • 6: Erweiterte Suche Autor, Körperschaft: Inamuddin.   :   (Online-Artikel)  —  0 Treffer    Suche wiederholen Permalink feed icon
  • 7: Erweiterte Suche Autor, Körperschaft: Cheshmehzangi, Ali   :   (Online-Artikel)  —  0 Treffer    Suche wiederholen Permalink feed icon
  • 8: Erweiterte Suche Autor, Körperschaft: Törk, Koray   :   —  1 Treffer    Suche wiederholen Permalink feed icon
  • 9: Erweiterte Suche Autor, Körperschaft: Haeckel, Matthias   :   (Online-Artikel)  —  0 Treffer    Suche wiederholen Permalink feed icon
  • 10: Erweiterte Suche Autor, Körperschaft: Schnack, Dietrich 1943-   :   (Online-Artikel)  —  0 Treffer    Suche wiederholen Permalink feed icon
  • 11: Erweiterte Suche Autor, Körperschaft: Takayuki Sakurai; Satoshi Watanabe; Akiko Kamiyoshi; Masahiro Sato; Takayuki Shindo   :   —  1 Treffer    Suche wiederholen Permalink feed icon
  • 12: Erweiterte Suche Autor, Körperschaft: Ullrich, Sören   :   —  3 Treffer    Suche wiederholen Permalink feed icon
  • 13: Erweiterte Suche Autor, Körperschaft: Lee, John J.   :   (Online-Artikel)  —  0 Treffer    Suche wiederholen Permalink feed icon
  • 14: Erweiterte Suche Autor, Körperschaft: LONSDALE, P.   :   (Online-Artikel)  —  391 Treffer    Suche wiederholen Permalink feed icon
  • 15: Erweiterte Suche Autor, Körperschaft: Durgadoo, Jonathan V.   :   (Online-Artikel)  —  28 Treffer    Suche wiederholen Permalink feed icon
  • 16: Erweiterte Suche Autor, Körperschaft: Haeckel, Matthias   :   (Online-Artikel)  —  0 Treffer    Suche wiederholen Permalink feed icon
  • 17: Erweiterte Suche Autor, Körperschaft: Graf, Gerhard 1950-   :   (Online-Artikel)  —  0 Treffer    Suche wiederholen Permalink feed icon
  • 18: Erweiterte Suche Autor, Körperschaft: Institut für Meereskunde   :   (Online-Artikel)  —  0 Treffer    Suche wiederholen Permalink feed icon
  • 19: Erweiterte Suche Autor, Körperschaft: Osipov, Sergey; Max Planck Institute for Chemistry, Mainz, Germany   :   —  1 Treffer    Suche wiederholen Permalink feed icon
  • 20: Erweiterte Suche Autor, Körperschaft: Baker, Paul A.   :   (Online-Artikel)  —  2128 Treffer    Suche wiederholen Permalink feed icon
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  • 1
    Schlagwort(e): Water-supply-Developing countries-Congresses. ; Water resources development-Developing countries-Congresses. ; Sustainable engineering-Congresses. ; Electronic books.
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: This collection contains 81 peer-reviewed papers on building sustainable infrastructure in emerging economies presented at the ASCE India Conference 2017, held in New Delhi, India, December 12-14, 2017.
    Materialart: Online-Ressource
    Seiten: 1 online resource (819 pages)
    Ausgabe: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9780784482025
    DDC: 363.61091724
    Sprache: Englisch
    Anmerkung: Intro -- 9780784482025.fm.pdf -- fm.pdf -- Final p i Title Urbanization Challenges 48202 Energy and Water.pdf -- Final p ii Notices Urbanization Challenges 48202 Energy and Water.pdf -- REVISED_Final p iii-iv Preface Urbanization Challenges 48202 Energy and Water.pdf -- Final p v Acknowledgments Urbanization Challenges 48202 Energy and Water.pdf -- toc.pdf -- 9780784482025.001.pdf -- 9780784482025.002.pdf -- 9780784482025.003.pdf -- 9780784482025.004.pdf -- 9780784482025.005.pdf -- 9780784482025.006.pdf -- 9780784482025.007.pdf -- 9780784482025.008.pdf -- 9780784482025.009.pdf -- 9780784482025.010.pdf -- 9780784482025.011.pdf -- 9780784482025.012.pdf -- 9780784482025.013.pdf -- 9780784482025.014.pdf -- 9780784482025.015.pdf -- 9780784482025.016.pdf -- 9780784482025.017.pdf -- 9780784482025.018.pdf -- 9780784482025.019.pdf -- 9780784482025.020.pdf -- 9780784482025.021.pdf -- 9780784482025.022.pdf -- 9780784482025.023.pdf -- 9780784482025.024.pdf -- 9780784482025.025.pdf -- 9780784482025.026.pdf -- 9780784482025.027.pdf -- 9780784482025.028.pdf -- 9780784482025.029.pdf -- 9780784482025.030.pdf -- 9780784482025.031.pdf -- 9780784482025.032.pdf -- 9780784482025.033.pdf -- 9780784482025.034.pdf -- 9780784482025.035.pdf -- 9780784482025.036.pdf -- 9780784482025.037.pdf -- 9780784482025.038.pdf -- 9780784482025.039.pdf -- 9780784482025.040.pdf -- 9780784482025.041.pdf -- 9780784482025.042.pdf -- 9780784482025.043.pdf -- 9780784482025.044.pdf -- 9780784482025.045.pdf -- 9780784482025.046.pdf -- 9780784482025.047.pdf -- 9780784482025.048.pdf -- 9780784482025.049.pdf -- 9780784482025.050.pdf -- 9780784482025.051.pdf -- 9780784482025.052.pdf -- 9780784482025.053.pdf -- 9780784482025.054.pdf -- 9780784482025.055.pdf -- 9780784482025.056.pdf -- 9780784482025.057.pdf -- 9780784482025.058.pdf -- 9780784482025.059.pdf -- 9780784482025.060.pdf. , 9780784482025.061.pdf -- 9780784482025.062.pdf -- 9780784482025.063.pdf -- 9780784482025.064.pdf -- 9780784482025.065.pdf -- 9780784482025.066.pdf -- 9780784482025.067.pdf -- 9780784482025.068.pdf -- 9780784482025.069.pdf -- 9780784482025.070.pdf -- 9780784482025.071.pdf -- 9780784482025.072.pdf -- 9780784482025.073.pdf -- 9780784482025.074.pdf -- 9780784482025.075.pdf -- 9780784482025.076.pdf -- 9780784482025.077.pdf -- 9780784482025.078.pdf -- 9780784482025.079.pdf -- 9780784482025.080.pdf -- 9780784482025.081.pdf.
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  • 2
    Digitale Medien
    Digitale Medien
    s.l. : American Chemical Society
    The @journal of organic chemistry 41 (1976), S. 1724-1728 
    ISSN: 1520-6904
    Quelle: ACS Legacy Archives
    Thema: Chemie und Pharmazie
    Materialart: Digitale Medien
    Standort Signatur Einschränkungen Verfügbarkeit
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  • 3
    Digitale Medien
    Digitale Medien
    College Park, Md. : American Institute of Physics (AIP)
    The Journal of Chemical Physics 91 (1989), S. 3280-3281 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Quelle: AIP Digital Archive
    Thema: Physik , Chemie und Pharmazie
    Materialart: Digitale Medien
    Standort Signatur Einschränkungen Verfügbarkeit
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  • 4
    Digitale Medien
    Digitale Medien
    College Park, Md. : American Institute of Physics (AIP)
    The Journal of Chemical Physics 90 (1989), S. 5880-5881 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Quelle: AIP Digital Archive
    Thema: Physik , Chemie und Pharmazie
    Materialart: Digitale Medien
    Standort Signatur Einschränkungen Verfügbarkeit
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  • 5
    Digitale Medien
    Digitale Medien
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Journal of the American Water Resources Association 18 (1982), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1752-1688
    Quelle: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Thema: Architektur, Bauingenieurwesen, Vermessung , Geographie
    Notizen: : Two computer models, the Continuous Stormwater Pollution Simulation System (CSPSS) and the Computer Optimized Storm-water Treatment Program (COST), were developed to aid in performing water quality planning. This paper describes COST and its site specific applications to the Philadelphia urban area, using the results from an updated CSPSS receiving water simulation. COST provides a planning and conceptual design tool to identify the economically optimum combination of wet weather and dry weather pollution abatement alternatives. Economic analysis procedures incorporated are based on production theory and marginal cost analysis. This study demonstrates that by transforming BOD removal to reduction in low DO events, using CSPSS results, the benefits associated with pollutant removal can be accounted for explicitly by COST simulations. This is important because a pound of BOD removed from combined sewer overflow may be of more benefit to the receiving water than a pound of BOD removed from urban stormwater runoff. The selection of a pollution control strategy is often a difficult decision which should consider social, political, financial, and regulatory factors. It is suggested that such a selection can be based on evaluating the tradeoffs between total annual costs and receiving water improvements, as determined using the COST and CSPSS programs.
    Materialart: Digitale Medien
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  • 6
    Digitale Medien
    Digitale Medien
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Journal of the American Water Resources Association 16 (1980), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1752-1688
    Quelle: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Thema: Architektur, Bauingenieurwesen, Vermessung , Geographie
    Notizen: : Data were obtained from drilling and testing of a test injection well for deep underground injection of waste water effluent from the proposed 50-million-gallon-per-day (mgd) South District Regional Wastewater Treatment Plant of the Miami-Dade Water and Sewer Authority, Dade County, Florida. The drilling operation progressed in stages, each stage coverting the strata to be sealed off by the 48-inch, 40-inch, 30-inch, and 20-inch casings, respectively. Total depth of the well is 3,200 feet. The top of the saline, cavernous, dolomitic Boulder Zone was found at 2,790 feet below the surface and is separated from the Floridan aquifer above by approximately 1,100 feet of confining limestone layers. These confining layers were determined, by packer testing, to be very effective. The transmissivity of the Boulder Zone was estimated to be 14 × 106 gallons per day per foot (gpd/ft) from the data obtained from pump out tests. An 8,000-gallon-per-minute (gpm) injection test was conducted to confirm well performance under operating conditions. Based on all of the data obtained, it was concluded that underground injection into the Boulder Zone of secondary waste water effluent from the proposed treatment plant is feasible, both hydraulically and environmentally. A monitoring system was proposed to provide a record of the effects of injection on the subsurface environment.
    Materialart: Digitale Medien
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  • 7
    Digitale Medien
    Digitale Medien
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Journal of the American Water Resources Association 16 (1980), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1752-1688
    Quelle: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Thema: Architektur, Bauingenieurwesen, Vermessung , Geographie
    Notizen: : This paper describes the Continuous Stormwater Pollution Simulation System (CSPSS) as well as a site-specific application of CSPSS to the Philadelphia urban area and its receiving water, the Delaware Estuary. Conceptually, CSPSS simulates the quantity and quality or urban stormwater runoff, combined sewer overflow, municipal and industrial waste water effuent, and upstream flow on a continuous basis for each time step in the simulation period. In addition, receiving water dissolved oxygen, suspended solids, and lead concentrations resulting from these pollutant sources may be simulated. However, only rceiving water dissolved oxygen (DO) response is considered in this paper. The continuous Do receiving water response model was calibrated to existing conditions usinv observed data at Chester, Pennsylvnia, located on the Delaware Estuary approximately 10 miles down stream from the study area. Average annual pollutant loads to the receiving water were estimated for all major sources and receiving water quality improvements resulting from removal of various portions of these pollutant loads were estimated by application of the calibrated stimultion model. It was found that the removal of oxygen-demanding pollutants from combined sewer overflow and urban stormwater runoff would result in relatively minor improvements in the overall dissoved oxygen resources of the Delaware Estuary; whereas. removal of oxygen demanding pollutants from waste water treatment plant effluent would result in greater improvemens. The results of this investigation can be used along with appropriate economic techniques to identify the most cost-effective mix of point and nonpoint source pollution control measures.
    Materialart: Digitale Medien
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  • 8
    Digitale Medien
    Digitale Medien
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Ground water 18 (1980), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1745-6584
    Quelle: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Thema: Energietechnik , Geologie und Paläontologie
    Notizen: .A test-injection well was drilled to a depth of 3,200 feet (976 m) to determine the feasibility of deep underground injection of 50 mgd (190,000 m 3/day) ADF of secondary treated waste water in south Dade County, Florida. Geological formation samples and water samples were collected and analyzed during the drilling of the well and geophysical logging was performed in the well at several stages. At this site, the Floridan aquifer extends from a depth of 920 feet (281 m) to 1,680 feet (512 m) and generally consists of limestone which is fossiliferous in part. Water from this aquifer is brackish, with chlorides ranging from 700 mg/l at the top to 15,000 mg/l at the bottom. The strata from 1,680 feet (512 m) to 2,790 feet (851 m) are essentially nonwater-producing and act as a confining bed between the Floridan aquifer and the Boulder Zone.The Boulder Zone begins at 2,790 feet (851 m) in depth and consists of a very hard, fractured, cavernous, dark dolomite. The water from this aquifer is very similar to sea water. The subsurface temperature gradient at this site is reversed from the normal gradient, cooling with depth at an average rate of approximately 0.4° F (0.22°C) per 100 feet (30 m). The injection zone extends from approximately 2,830 feet (863 m) to 2,920 feet (891 m) in depth. Results of pumping tests indicate that the Boulder Zone is very transmissive and has a good confining bed above it.
    Materialart: Digitale Medien
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  • 9
    ISSN: 1520-5126
    Quelle: ACS Legacy Archives
    Thema: Chemie und Pharmazie
    Materialart: Digitale Medien
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  • 10
    Digitale Medien
    Digitale Medien
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Journal of the American Water Resources Association 23 (1987), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1752-1688
    Quelle: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Thema: Architektur, Bauingenieurwesen, Vermessung , Geographie
    Notizen: : The Biscayne Aquifer is the sole source of drinking water for approximately three million residents of southeast Florida. Nine hazardous waste sites on the EPA National Priority List overlie this aquifer. Extensive investigation of an 80 square-mile area in metropolitan Miami detected low to moderate levels of toxic contaminants in the ground water, with volatile organic chemicals the most prevalent. The Centers for Disease Control concluded that contamination of the aquifer within the study area poses a serious potential threat to public health. Recommendations for source control and cleanup have been partially carried out. The top few feet of soil at the Miami Drum site have been excavated and relocated; ground water encountered during excavation has been withdrawn and treated, and the Northwest 58th Street Landfill has been closed. Recovery and treatment of ground water from the contaminated area was the recommended cleanup measure and has been approved by EPA and state and local agencies. A preventive action program for the Biscayne Aquifer region was also recommended for implementation by local agencies. This program consists of regulations, waste management practices, construction and treatment guidelines, and public information activities and materials. Implementing this program will help keep the Biscayne Aquifer water drinkable far into the future.
    Materialart: Digitale Medien
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