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Stormwater : a resource for scientists, engineers, and policy makers / William G. Wilson.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Chicago ; London : The University of Chicago Press, 2016Description: 1 online resource (xviii, 362 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780226365145
  • 022636514X
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Stormwater.DDC classification:
  • 628/.21 23
LOC classification:
  • TD657
Online resources:
Contents:
Urban conditions. More people, more pavement -- Precipitation and evapotranspiration -- Emissions, deposition, and accumulation -- Imperviousness -- Environmental harms. Urban runoff -- Nutrients -- Mercury and other metals -- Emerging pollutants -- Thermal pollution -- Responses in streams and groundwater -- Ecosystem responses -- Solutions. Streams and trees: riparian ecosystems -- Control measures.
Summary: As cities grow and climates change, precipitation increases, and with every great storm--from record-breaking Boston blizzards to floods in Houston--come buckets of stormwater and a deluge of problems. In Stormwater, William G. Wilson brings us the first expansive guide to stormwater science and management in urban environments, where rising runoff threatens both human and environmental health. As Wilson shows, rivers of runoff flowing from manmade surfaces--such as roads, sidewalks, and industrial sites--carry a glut of sediments and pollutants. Unlike soil, pavement does not filter or biodegrade these contaminants. Oil, pesticides, road salts, metals, automobile chemicals, and bacteria all pour into stormwater systems. Often this runoff discharges directly into waterways, uncontrolled and untreated, damaging valuable ecosystems. Detailing the harm that can be caused by this urban runoff, Wilson also outlines methods of control, from restored watersheds to green roofs and rain gardens, and, in so doing, gives hope in the face of an omnipresent threat. Illustrated throughout, Stormwater will be an essential resource for urban planners and scientists, policy makers, citizen activists, and environmental educators in the stormy decades to come.
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Item type Home library Collection Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode
Electronic-Books Electronic-Books OPJGU Sonepat- Campus E-Books EBSCO Available

Includes bibliographical references and indexes.

Urban conditions. More people, more pavement -- Precipitation and evapotranspiration -- Emissions, deposition, and accumulation -- Imperviousness -- Environmental harms. Urban runoff -- Nutrients -- Mercury and other metals -- Emerging pollutants -- Thermal pollution -- Responses in streams and groundwater -- Ecosystem responses -- Solutions. Streams and trees: riparian ecosystems -- Control measures.

Online resource; title from PDF title page (EBSCO, viewed August 4, 2016).

As cities grow and climates change, precipitation increases, and with every great storm--from record-breaking Boston blizzards to floods in Houston--come buckets of stormwater and a deluge of problems. In Stormwater, William G. Wilson brings us the first expansive guide to stormwater science and management in urban environments, where rising runoff threatens both human and environmental health. As Wilson shows, rivers of runoff flowing from manmade surfaces--such as roads, sidewalks, and industrial sites--carry a glut of sediments and pollutants. Unlike soil, pavement does not filter or biodegrade these contaminants. Oil, pesticides, road salts, metals, automobile chemicals, and bacteria all pour into stormwater systems. Often this runoff discharges directly into waterways, uncontrolled and untreated, damaging valuable ecosystems. Detailing the harm that can be caused by this urban runoff, Wilson also outlines methods of control, from restored watersheds to green roofs and rain gardens, and, in so doing, gives hope in the face of an omnipresent threat. Illustrated throughout, Stormwater will be an essential resource for urban planners and scientists, policy makers, citizen activists, and environmental educators in the stormy decades to come.

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