Dry Spring: The Coming Water Crisis of North AmericaBetween global warming and ever-increasing consumption, the world is fast running out of water. And while water's scarcity will challenge the success of North America's fastest-growing regions, other areas of the continent will experience dramatic flooding. Dry Spring looks at how the coming water crisis will devastate communities unless urgent action is taken. In many areas, the damage has already begun. Author Chris Wood relates compelling stories of people all over the continent coping with new conditions: Okanagan orchardists facing an uncertain future; a Mexican fisherman on the now-dry Colorado River Delta, which has been reduced to desert because of upstream usage by the American West; a Las Vegas water cop who monitors excessive lawn watering; a New Brunswick couple fleeing their coastal house because of the encroaching ocean; and more. Wood also shows how practical solutions like xeriscaping, water "recycling," and run-off containment can preserve water for future generations. |
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Page 132
... centimetres below present - day lows . Lake Ontario could drop more , losing 54 centimetres from present - day lows , with the deepest impact in the spring . But Lake Erie , already the shallowest of the five , could fall as much as 85 ...
... centimetres below present - day lows . Lake Ontario could drop more , losing 54 centimetres from present - day lows , with the deepest impact in the spring . But Lake Erie , already the shallowest of the five , could fall as much as 85 ...
Page 176
... centimetres of the bridge- deck . Roughly 8,000 kilometres of such channels distribute water from the various on- and off - stream reservoirs to farmers , enough to carry a stream from Whitehorse in the Yukon Territory to Saint John ...
... centimetres of the bridge- deck . Roughly 8,000 kilometres of such channels distribute water from the various on- and off - stream reservoirs to farmers , enough to carry a stream from Whitehorse in the Yukon Territory to Saint John ...
Page 259
... centimetres ( one inch ) of water over an acre of his fields . He needs 46 to 50 centimetres ( 18 to 20 inches ) for each of his acres over a season , adding up to $ 320,000 poured into the dirt before he harvests a single bale of ...
... centimetres ( one inch ) of water over an acre of his fields . He needs 46 to 50 centimetres ( 18 to 20 inches ) for each of his acres over a season , adding up to $ 320,000 poured into the dirt before he harvests a single bale of ...
Contents
Thanks9 | 9 |
Prologue The Marble and the Bowl | 11 |
Why the Worlds Forests Are Burning23 | 23 |
Copyright | |
17 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
Alberta All-American Canal American amount aquifers Arctic Athabasca average Basin border British Columbia California Canada Canadian Canal centimetres China Climate Change Colorado River cost Council of Canadians dams decades Delta desert drop drought ecological economic ecosystems Environment Environmental farm farmers flood flow forest glaciers Global green groundwater growing half harvest heat houses human Ibid industrial irrigation Island January kilometres kilometres per hour Lake Mead Lakes land Las Vegas less melting metres Mexico Milk River million moisture monsoons mountain Muriel Lake NAFTA natural nearly Nestlé North America northern ocean oil sand Okanagan Ontario percent Personal interview pipe plants province pump rain rainfall regions release reservoirs rising Saskatchewan says scientists season snow soil southern spring storm summer supply Telephone interview temperatures Theresa Point trees turned United Valley Vancouver Vegas warm Water Crisis weather wetland wind winter xeriscaping