Killing the Hidden Waters

Killing the Hidden Waters
Author: Charles Bowden
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Total Pages: 214
Release: 2003-11
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 9780292743069

From the introduction to the new edition: “I’ll tell you where I went wrong. The faucet in the kitchen always becomes the reality we believe, and the periodic droughts, one of which for much of the nineties savaged the West, remain a fantasy. This happens each and every day as the water roars from the faucet and the skies remain dangerously blue.” —Charles Bowden In the quarter-century since his first book, Killing the Hidden Waters, was published in 1977, Charles Bowden has become one of the premier writers on the American environment, rousing a generation of readers to both the wonder and the tragedy of humanity’s relationship with the land. Revisiting his earliest work with a new introduction, “What I Learned Watching the Wells Go Down,” Bowden looks back at his first effort to awaken people to the costs and limits of using natural resources through a simple and obvious example—water. He drives home the point that years of droughts, rationing, and even water wars have done nothing to slake the insatiable consumption of water in the American West. Even more timely now than in 1977, Killing the Hidden Waters remains, in Edward Abbey’s words, “the best all-around summary I’ve read yet, anywhere, of how our greed-driven, ever-expanding urban-industrial empire is consuming, wasting, poisoning, and destroying not only the resource basis of its own existence, but also the vital, sustaining basis of life everywhere.”

The Secret Knowledge of Water

The Secret Knowledge of Water
Author: Craig Childs
Publisher: Back Bay Books
Total Pages: 250
Release: 2008-12-14
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 0316055301

Naturalist Craig Childs's "utterly memorable and fantastic" study of the desert's dangerous beauty is based on years of adventures in the deserts of the American West (Washington Post). Like the highest mountain peaks, deserts are environments that can be inhospitable even to the most seasoned explorers. Craig Childs, who has spent years in the deserts of the American West as an adventurer, a river guide, and a field instructor in natural history, has developed a keen appreciation for these forbidding landscapes: their beauty, their wonder, and especially their paradoxes. His extraordinary treks through arid lands in search of water are an astonishing revelation of the natural world at its most extreme. "Utterly memorable and fantastic...Certainly no reader will ever see the desert in the same way again." —Suzannah Lessard, Washington Post

Hidden Waters - The Roles of Culture in High-Tech Jordan Valley (Jordan).

Hidden Waters - The Roles of Culture in High-Tech Jordan Valley (Jordan).
Author: Mauro Van Aken
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2010
Genre:
ISBN:

The Jordan Valley (Jordan) is today a post-modern laboratory of agronomic and hydraulic techniques of arid areas where irrigation represents a conflict interface between different life-worlds. The new hydraulic technical order of the water network is characterized today by continuous disorder in a frame of increasing scarcity, ecological and economic unsustainability and competition: irrigators creatively manipulate the complex and hidden water network as a main strategy, daily reinserting water in its political and cultural dimensions. In the frame of scarcity and new “community” participation policies, what is at stake are different ideas of community between development actors and local irrigators: around water, different cultural perceptions of place, of belonging and of society encounter and struggle.

Killing the Hidden Waters

Killing the Hidden Waters
Author: Charles Bowden
Publisher:
Total Pages: 216
Release: 1977
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

From the introduction to the new edition:"I'll tell you where I went wrong. The faucet in the kitchen always becomes the reality we believe, and the periodic droughts, one of which for much of the nineties savaged the West, remain a fantasy. This happens each and every day as the water roars from the faucet and the skies remain dangerously blue." Charles Bowden- In the quarter-century since his first book, Killing the Hidden Waters, was published in 1977, Charles Bowden has become one of the premier writers on the American environment, rousing a generation of readers to both the wonder and the tragedy of humanity's relationship with the land. Revisiting his earliest work with a new introduction, "What I Learned Watching the Wells Go Down," Bowden looks back at his first effort to awaken people to the costs and limits of using natural resources through a simple and obvious example-water. He drives home the point that years of droughts, rationing, and even water wars have done nothing to slake the insatiable consumption of water in the American West. Even more timely now than in 1977, Killing the Hidden Waters remains, in Edward Abbey's words, "the best all-around summary I've read yet, anywhere, of how our greed-driven, ever-expanding urban-industrial empire is consuming, wasting, poisoning, and destroying not only the resource basis of its own existence, but also the vital, sustaining basis of life everywhere."

The Secret Knowledge of Water

The Secret Knowledge of Water
Author: Craig Childs
Publisher: Back Bay Books
Total Pages: 304
Release: 2001-05-01
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 9780316610698

Deserts are environments that can be inhospitable even to seasoned explorers. Craig Childs has spent years in the deserts of the American West, and his treks through arid lands in search of water reveal the natural world at its most extreme.

Contesting Hidden Waters

Contesting Hidden Waters
Author: W. Todd Jarvis
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 211
Release: 2014-05-23
Genre: Science
ISBN: 1136212752

The world increasingly relies on groundwater resources for drinking water and the provision of food for a growing population. The utilization of aquifer systems also extends beyond freshwater supply to include other resources such as heat extraction and the storage and disposal of substances. Unlike other books about conflict resolution and negotiations over water resources, this volume is unique in focusing exclusively on conflicts over groundwater and aquifers. The author explores the specific challenges presented by these "hidden" resources, which are shown to be very different from those posed by surface water resources. Whereas surface watersheds are static, groundwater boundaries are value-laden and constantly changing during development. The book describes the various issues surrounding the governance and management of these resources and the various parties involved in conflicts and negotiations over them. Through first-hand accounts from a pracademic skilled in both process and substance as a groundwater professional and professional mediator, the book offers options for addressing the challenges and issues through a transdisciplinary approach.