It is, after all, not only when reservoirs are low that we should strive to waste less water. |
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Water companies have hundreds of different sources from rivers and reservoirs to ground water supplies and wells. |
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Most drinking water comes from municipal reservoirs, but people in isolated areas get their drinking water from wells. |
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Stone and, later, bronze vessels became reservoirs of animal and vegetable oils wicked with rush and hemp. |
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It later serviced the local textile industry, but then found a niche with the water industry, making valve keys for reservoirs and water mains. |
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The people you meet there are all the same too, and underneath the forced smiles and jaded handshakes you detect great reservoirs of boredom. |
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Large, intact portions of the Cienega Corridor allow for rain and snowmelt to enter the ground and recharge our drinking water reservoirs. |
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Because deep aquifers are slow to recharge, the reservoirs are essentially a nonrenewable resource that's being mined. |
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Overnight, we shut down generators and allow the reservoirs to refill with water, while we import cheap thermal power from the US and Alberta. |
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Clouds gather, sometimes developing into a cyclone but will a water-starved Chennai see its tanks, lakes, wells and reservoirs full this year? |
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Herbicides and other pesticides can reach streams, lakes, and reservoirs in water that runs off treated fields. |
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It grows on nutrient-poor muds on the edges of ponds, lakes and reservoirs that are exposed when water levels fall. |
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From there, water is channeled into reservoirs, and then to individual homes. |
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Loch Ness is the largest body of freshwater in Britain, containing more water than all the lakes and reservoirs in England and Wales combined. |
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Apart from it becoming scarcer, the great lakes and reservoirs are being contaminated and no longer is the water as pure as in days gone by. |
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This is why methane bubbles out of waterlogged bogs, seasonally flooded forests, reservoirs and lakes and landfills. |
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To put together critical creative teams, the 21 st-century organization must go to urban centers where reservoirs of talent are concentrated. |
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Fountain pens, with their own reservoirs of ink, invented in the 19th century, are occasionally used for drawing by artists today. |
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The company also makes cigarette filters, ink reservoirs and self-adhesive tear tapes. |
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If humidifiers are necessary, scrub the fluid reservoirs at least twice a week to prevent mold growth. |
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This comes after years of changing ribbons and adding toner ink to reservoirs within the computer. |
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Engineering machine metal-cutting fluid reservoirs are used as coolants and lubricants in metal machining processes. |
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Printing is accomplished via tiny cells or ink reservoirs which are engraved into the surface of the print cylinder. |
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The apparatus includes a plurality of tubes and reservoirs in fluid communication with the tubes. |
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Some automated reprocessors are designed with disinfectant reservoirs that are easy to access for concentration testing. |
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This also kept the cost of ink cartridges low since they were little more than reservoirs of ink. |
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Depending on the Leishmania strain and the sandfly species, the major reservoirs of disease are dogs or rodents and sometimes humans. |
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This is a landscape of woodlands, forests, reservoirs and farmsteads scattered below high moorland ridges which reach their peak at Shining Tor. |
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Our reservoirs and surrounding countryside are the jewel in our crown when we play host to visitors and tourists. |
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All water in Texas rivers, streams, bayous, reservoirs and other waterways is considered public water and available for legal use by anyone. |
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Until late October the birds may be found on estuaries, flooded coastal marshes and farm reservoirs. |
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Due to the lack of fresh water, seawater has flowed into six of Chimen's 24 reservoirs. |
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Ospreys live near rivers, estuaries, salt marshes, lakes, reservoirs, and other large bodies of water. |
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They argue that water needs could be met by dredging existing reservoirs, using water from nearby cities, or desalinating ocean water. |
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Waters to head for include canals, rivers, gravel pits, lakes, ponds, meres and reservoirs. |
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Bottomland hardwood forests and remnants of swamp forests can be found near the flood control reservoirs. |
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It's a modern functioning city with reservoirs for water, septic composting, and highways. |
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The low water contents strongly suggest that the erupted tephras were derived from a shallow magma reservoir or reservoirs. |
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At present the prevention of human leptospirosis is very difficult at it is impossible to eliminate animal reservoirs. |
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This unassuming film has reservoirs of riches that have transfixed me three times now. |
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A controversial cull aimed at wiping out ruddy ducks has begun at two Essex reservoirs. |
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Where no cut-off switches in the boreholes exist, this results in a combination of air and water being pumped to the reservoirs. |
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It pipes water to its customers from huge reservoirs encircling Scotland's cities. |
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Two of the reservoirs are fully fenced in, meaning that livestock are kept well away from the water. |
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As the rain persists and reservoirs back up, homes, businesses and roads take up the slack. |
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In one set of experiments, they loaded the sugar dextran, the anticoagulant heparin, or a growth hormone into reservoirs on separate chips. |
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Thousands of sheep are grazing yards from unfenced reservoirs supplying half a million Scots with drinking water. |
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Large areas of the rock are covered in concrete for catchment which is then channelled into huge underground reservoirs. |
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Water quality in reservoirs will also be improved and the forests in their catchment areas better protected. |
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On land, giant reservoirs holding saline water could be built to offset the rise in sea levels caused by the melting of the polar ice-caps. |
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The significant declines in reservoirs and the low streamflows are indicative of the deficiencies. |
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Many recreation centers and health clubs have beautiful pools, and open-water swimming can take you to lakes, reservoirs and even the ocean. |
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Constructed on hilltops with views of major valleys, the pucaras had barracks, houses, reservoirs, and a sun temple. |
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Currently none of the water stored in the reservoirs is used for irrigation, and the region enjoys a surplus of water supply. |
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It redefines community with its never-ending reservoirs of immortal classics to improvise, reshape and bring in new meaning to melodies. |
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Tigress Petrophysics allows petrophysicists to characterise reservoirs by analysing log and core data. |
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It was built on a sloping terrain between two seasonal storm-water channels with dams and channels to direct the water into huge reservoirs. |
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Water bosses are reassuring householders that the region's reservoirs are in tip-top shape. |
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Stock ponds and reservoirs with mosquito-eating fish such as green sunfish, bluegills, guppies or any surface-feeding minnow. |
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The present storage is only of the order of 5,500 MCM including hydel reservoirs. |
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The trees and peatlands of the vast northern boreal forest comprise one of the planet's largest carbon reservoirs. |
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Throughout these valleys Red-necked Grebes are found on sloughs, ponds, lakes, and reservoirs, not on moving water. |
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Common habitats include borrow pits, sloughs, city park ponds, sluggish streams and shallow margins of reservoirs and lakes. |
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Countryside bosses have organised a meeting of the Friends of Blackshaw Brook, to discuss plans for the valley area in which the reservoirs lie. |
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Huge deposits of solid salt, mostly sodium chloride, and salts dissolved in the oceans are vast reservoirs of chloride compounds. |
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Diversionary tunnels were dug from the cavities to aqueducts filling the reservoirs, which were lined with lime. |
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In hot, dry areas, salt build-up in reservoirs has led to saline waters that ruined farmland. |
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At this time of year, near the start of the six-month dry season, reservoirs should be more than half full. |
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They may serve as reservoirs of the bacterium and a harborage for its vector, the flea beetle. |
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Let's hope that some of last night's rain ended up in the right places, such as catchment areas, reservoirs, etc. |
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The reservoirs store rainwater, groundwater, and surface water until water is needed on the field. |
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These schemes made use of the flow of water through a series of reservoirs, tunnels, penstocks and power plants. |
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Cooling is provided with minimum exploitation of resources by using structural elements as thermal reservoirs of coolness from nighttime air. |
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Increasing numbers of privatised water schemes are linked to ventures to abstract more water through vast dams and reservoirs. |
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Adding to this gloomy scenario is the fact that reservoirs in northeastern Colorado have been drawn down substantially. |
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The air necessary to equilibrize the pressure of water, is drawn from the reservoirs at the surface. |
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It was a dry month, with rainfall being only 47 per cent of average and reservoirs only 59 per cent full. |
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And they have created vast new reservoirs of support for a nationalist resistance that had already gained a mass following. |
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The lack of rain and the increase in water usage is literally draining water supplies from the region's reservoirs. |
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Council chief executive Glenn Snelgrove is urging residents to conserve water to stop the reservoirs from running dry. |
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It didn't rain for months, and water was rationed as the reservoirs ran dry. |
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The reservoirs were low and the supply was being augmented by pumping from the Mints Feet well. |
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Of the five reservoirs in question two will be for specialist fishing and the others for general angling. |
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Year round rains had filled the reservoirs to the brim, a sight not seen in recent memory. |
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Much of Iraq's infrastructure is wrecked and some oil reservoirs may have been damaged by over-pumping, water injection or flooding. |
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I like the rain, because it fills up the reservoirs and furnishes me with plentiful electricity. |
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The court ruled that the bureau can release water from its dams and reservoirs when needed to sustain silvery minnows and the dying river. |
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But the best form of water storage is in the ground, not in huge surface reservoirs created by damming rivers. |
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The answer is probably related to the size of melt reservoirs and the kinetics of zircon solution and precipitation. |
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California has already surpassed its water allotment and has begun drawing down water levels from reservoirs along the river. |
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In Delian architecture, wells, cisterns, and large water reservoirs were usually located in a courtyard. |
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Liquid water, derived from these underground reservoirs, may exist again on the Martian surface in the future because of episodic changes in atmospheric thickness. |
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The quality of water eventually becomes a concern, as reservoirs drop and salt and silt become more concentrated. |
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Avoid using pots with built-in reservoirs for the same reason. |
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The limited and precious supply of fossil water represents a residue of millions of years of water storage, once sealed safely in nature's underground reservoirs. |
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The government has mobilized military units to clear driftwood from dam drains, which could slow drainage of water from reservoirs if another typhoon lashes the country. |
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Purple loosestrife will grow vigorously and clog irrigation canals, ditches, stream banks and reservoirs, resulting in less water available for crop production and recreation. |
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As demand increased, other natural or man-made reservoirs were developed. |
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The lure of the three frigid Galilean moons is that beneath their thick crust of ice may lie vast reservoirs of liquid water that harbor, or once harbored, life. |
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The Environment Agency has conducted similar studies each summer since the 1995 drought that resulted in many reservoirs and rivers across Yorkshire running dry. |
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Studying how they evolve and move through human and animal populations might identify new flu reservoirs and enable the emergence of new strains to be predicted. |
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Nurses are great reservoirs of information and, as I quickly learned, love getting huge boxes of chocolate at the nursing station as a show of appreciation. |
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Reaching back to higher headquarters, which traditionally enjoy larger staffs and larger reservoirs of knowledge, experience, and information, is not a new concept. |
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Furthermore, studies of Palaeogene deposits from West Greenland have shown that in situ basaltic pyroclastic rocks can form important oil reservoirs. |
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The fault structure was veneered by lava which was produced by the peripheral magma reservoirs and flowed down the scarp and into the lower central caldera. |
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Our state's reservoirs and soil profiles were drawn down this summer. |
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Divers, grebes, geese, ducks, raptors, auks and passerines are the most affected especially in very hard weather which results in the surface of lakes and reservoirs freezing. |
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White South Africans invented the Bantustans to pen black people into defined reservoirs of labor, being allowed to leave only when working for white South Africa. |
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Once, in 2013, Kyrgyzstan halted water for its reservoirs, and at least 11 regions of Uzbekistan suffered shortages. |
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If more reservoirs or artificial lakes are needed, they should be built. |
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Fly fishers in the salt water environment need something entirely different to their freshwater counterpart on the chalk stream, as does the angler who fishes big reservoirs. |
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The remainder obtain water from streams, rivers, lakes and reservoirs. |
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There are five boreholes and water reservoirs with 30,000 litre-capacity. |
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Flooding by hydroelectric reservoirs is especially detrimental to permanently frozen peatlands because the overall permafrost regime is completely altered or obliterated. |
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Water supply in drainage basins is provided either by direct abstraction from rivers or by impoundment, which requires the construction of reservoirs. |
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Despite inhibition of viral replication in plasma, lymph nodes, and at other sites, reservoirs of HIV infection in latently infected resting T lymphocytes remain. |
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Because of tidal action, which in its own way can be a form of marine structure, bays are more akin to rivers and streams than to lakes and reservoirs. |
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Traditionally, increased water demands have been met by developing additional water supplies using dams, impoundment reservoirs, and canal systems. |
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We need more reservoirs and desalinisation plants, plus some visionary diversions of water from wet to dry areas, together with connecting pipelines. |
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On afternoons and weekends you can visit nearby beaches, islands, fishing villages, hidden lagoons, reservoirs, coconut plantations, and waterfalls. |
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Wildlife, particularly rabbits and hares, act as reservoirs of disease. |
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Bangladeshi water engineers say that Indian barrages, canals, reservoirs and irrigation schemes are slowly strangling the country and are stopping its development. |
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Johnson Welded Products Ohio-based manufacturer of reservoirs for air brake systems. |
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Leaking pipes, unlined channels, evaporation from reservoirs and canals and poorly directed spraying mean that 60-85 per cent of the water never reaches the plants' roots. |
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By contrast, the deadliness of contaminants added to reservoirs or water sources would most likely be neutralized by dilution and standard water treatment. |
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On the arid plains of northern China, the depletion of shallow reservoirs has forced people to sink wells into aquifers more than 1 km below the surface. |
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In winter, small numbers of Smews visit Britain and Ireland, mostly on large lakes, reservoirs and estuaries in East Anglia and south-east England. |
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If the weather doesn't look good, there are plenty of short waymarked trails around the six reservoirs starting from the car park by the ranger's office. |
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In Duccio's rendering, Mary's limpid eyes are reservoirs of reflection. |
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It is true that we have had a dry winter, and that the reservoirs are low. |
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The Pennines are an important water catchment area with numerous reservoirs in the head streams of the river valleys. |
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Because Granite Wash reservoirs are sandier than shale-based formations, they can provide for more prolific wells. |
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The United Kingdom also has numerous dams and reservoirs to store water for drinking and industry. |
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The influx of people also led to demand for better water supplies, and a number of new reservoirs were constructed on the outskirts of the town. |
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Subsalt reservoirs such as Tupi were unknown in the twentieth century, mainly because the industry was unable to probe them. |
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The field consists of three separate reservoirs known as Bridport, Sherwood and Frome. |
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Development and evaluation of the The Lake Macroinvertebrate Integrity Index for New Jersey lakes and reservoirs. |
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The Colorado River is a major source of water in the Southwest and many dams, such as the Hoover Dam, form reservoirs along it. |
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Maerl beds are reservoirs of biodiversity, important both as nursery grounds for young scallops and young fish. |
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Thus, creating conductive fractures in the rock is instrumental in extraction from naturally impermeable shale reservoirs. |
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Another disadvantage of hydroelectric dams is the need to relocate the people living where the reservoirs are planned. |
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Medical disposable assemblies bonded with Dymax adhesives include catheters, tube sets, reservoirs, respiratory masks, syringes and oxygenators. |
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River regulation through the creation of dams and reservoirs, as well as channelization, can degrade and destroy dipper habitat. |
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Peat soils and blanket bog on the moors store carbon while high rainfall fills many reservoirs supplying water to the adjacent conurbations. |
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Yet those who keep the faith in this four-mile affair can be rewarded as Tank Top has reservoirs of stamina. |
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Natural England describes the South Pennine moorlands as the Watershed Landscape where the area's high rainfall fills a multitude of reservoirs. |
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Brood ecology of Mallards and Gadwalls nesting on islands in large reservoirs. |
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There are small coniferous plantations, particularly around the reservoirs, but overall woodland cover is minimal. |
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The Anglezarke, Upper Rivington, Lower Rivington and Yarrow reservoirs were built to provide Liverpool with clean water. |
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Serologic and virologic investigations suggested that these 2 viruses shared Pteropus bats or flying foxes as natural host reservoirs. |
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The 'Rivington Pike Scheme' was undertaken by Thomas Hawksley between 1850 and 1857 to construct five reservoirs. |
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To the east of the area can be found the separate chains of Belmont, Delph, Turton and Entwistle, Wayoh and Jumbles reservoirs. |
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Situated in the northeast is Haslingden Grane, a glaciated valley with three reservoirs, Calf Hey, Ogden and Holden Wood. |
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Tank reservoirs store liquids or gases in storage tanks that may be elevated, at grade level, or buried. |
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Underground reservoirs are used to store liquids, principally either water or petroleum, below ground. |
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In hilly regions, reservoirs are often constructed by enlarging existing lakes. |
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Service reservoirs store fully treated potable water close to the point of distribution. |
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Supported by various studies, Everly, Strouse and McCormack point out that, given the right tools, we can build up our reservoirs of resilience. |
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Many service reservoirs are constructed as water towers, often as elevated structures on concrete pillars where the landscape is relatively flat. |
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Other service reservoirs can be almost entirely underground, especially in more hilly or mountainous country. |
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Large service reservoirs can also be managed to reduce the cost of pumping, by refilling the reservoir at times of day when energy costs are low. |
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Circa 3 000 BC, the craters of extinct volcanoes in Arabia were used as reservoirs by farmers for their irrigation water. |
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In Sri Lanka large reservoirs were created by ancient Sinhalese kings in order to save the water for irrigation. |
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Vast artificial reservoirs were also built by various ancient kingdoms in Bengal, Assam and Cambodia. |
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Many reservoirs often allow some recreational uses, such as fishing and boating. |
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Occasionally reservoirs can be managed to retain water during high rainfall events to prevent or reduce downstream flooding. |
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The limnology of reservoirs has many similarities to that of lakes of equivalent size. |
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Many reservoirs experience considerable variations in level producing significant areas that are intermittently underwater or dried out. |
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Past the motorway the trail follows Blackstone Edge to the A58 road, then passes a series of reservoirs. |
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A temporary village was built at Scar House to house the workers building the reservoirs and some remains can still be seen. |
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The catchment lies on carboniferous rocks of Millstone Grit, and is heavily reservoired, with 39 reservoirs licensed to provide water. |
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To the south of Winscar reservoir, other streams supply Upper Windleden and Lower Windleden reservoirs. |
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In both cases the former confluences of the two tributaries with the River Derwent are now submerged below the respective reservoirs. |
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In some cases when only poor sources of water were available complex systems of reservoirs were built. |
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Colleges and universities provide reservoirs of talent for job recruiters. |
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The other merely needs jealousy and bate, of which there are great and easily accessible reservoirs in every human heart. |
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Dams and reservoirs provide a more dependable source of power by smoothing seasonal changes in water flow. |
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They are most numerous in the Lake District but other concentrations occur within the Norfolk Broads, some major reservoirs and principal rivers. |
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Dundee, along with parts of Perthshire and Angus is supplied from Lintrathen and Backwater reservoirs in Glen Isla. |
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Both supplies are delivered from huge underground reservoirs excavated under the Rock of Gibraltar. |
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The lithology kind is one of important parameters in cognition of hydrocarbonic reservoirs manner. |
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Masonry channels carried water from distant springs and reservoirs along a precise gradient, using gravity alone. |
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The study hypothesized that existing bulges containing methane reservoirs could eventually have the same fate. |
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This second period of the Paleozoic era created abundant fossils that became major petroleum and gas reservoirs. |
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Natural gas is often stored underground inside depleted gas reservoirs from previous gas wells, salt domes, or in tanks as liquefied natural gas. |
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The Longden End Brook rises between the hill and the motorway and the Piethorne Brook drains to reservoirs to the southwest. |
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In many countries large reservoirs are closely regulated to try to prevent or minimise failures of containment. |
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However, such analysis can often omit the environmental impacts of dams and the reservoirs that they contain. |
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Ashopton can be flooded by the creation of reservoirs, ruining many livelihoods. |
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The town has several reservoirs, one of which supplies the Ffestiniog Hydro Power Station with water. |
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The contract is a service based on the current operation of six reservoirs in the region of Kielce. |
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Gas is produced from the Hamilton, Hamilton North and Hamilton East reservoirs. |
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In 1887, the two new reservoirs of Llanishen were built to allow distribution of water collected in the Brecon Beacons to the city. |
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In some reservoirs, such as in the Middle East, the natural pressure is sufficient over a long time. |
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Other important reservoirs include muscles, blood, and the spleen which all have the capacity to hold a high concentration of oxygen. |
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Each supported a tremendous load of water, which was gathered from three reservoirs, at either end of and in the middle of the park. |
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Natural gas is found in deep underground rock formations or associated with other hydrocarbon reservoirs in coal beds and as methane clathrates. |
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Salvage project of the archaeological heritage of the Iksu and Carchemish dam reservoirs. |
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But Hamid-Reza Janbaz, head of the Tehran water and sewerage system, says the reservoirs behind the Latian and Lar dams are virtually empty. |
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Gulf Coast, the Oligocene Vicksburg and Frio Formations contain major petroleum reservoirs in the Rio Grande embayment. |
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Owing in part to their vast size, abyssal plains are believed to be major reservoirs of biodiversity. |
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They are noted for the heterogeneity and variability in lithological composition, low permeability of reservoirs. |
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A related issue is the methane clathrate reservoirs found under sediments on the ocean floors. |
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Helibuckets, such as the Bambi bucket, are usually filled by submerging the bucket into lakes, rivers, reservoirs, or portable tanks. |
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The substances and states of the two heat reservoirs should be chosen so that they are not in thermal equilibrium with one another. |
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Then the absolute or thermodynamic temperatures, T1 and T2, of the reservoirs are defined so that to be such that. |
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Carnot's theorem states that all reversible engines operating between the same heat reservoirs are equally efficient. |
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Some reservoirs support several uses, and the operating rules may be complex. |
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And Northumbrian Water reservoirs were deserted, some of them unaccessible, while at others anglers decided it was too cold to fish. |
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Some even have rooftop reservoirs for water, as the water supply is also unreliable. |
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The largest reservoirs, all in the coastal region of Peru, are the Poechos, Tinajones, San Lorenzo, and El Fraile reservoirs. |
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Hydroelectric reservoirs are common in South Canterbury and Central Otago, the largest of which is Lake Benmore, on the Waitaki River. |
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Transformity increases with the increase in temperature between cold and hot reservoirs. |
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As spring temperatures rise, water from the snowpacks replenishes reservoirs vital to the irrigated agriculture of western states. |
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Moreover, the great gerbil and the Mongolian gerbil are suspected of being enzootic reservoirs. |
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Recently, Robert Siliciano's group has developed a complete set of reagents for quantitating reservoirs in nonhuman primates. |
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Fast-growing North Texas would like to buy water from Oklahoma reservoirs, but the Sooner state isn't selling. |
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Breastshot and undershot wheels can be used on rivers or high volume flows with large reservoirs. |
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Between the Chickahominy Pump Station and the receiving reservoirs, aging raw water mains are at the end of their useful lives. |
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Water was extracted from rivers and canals, then later mills requiring ever more water, built and maintained their own reservoirs. |
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Commenced drilling of the Koba-1 well, targeting Lower Liassic and Upper Triassic clastic reservoirs. |
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However reservoirs have significant environmental impact, as does alteration of naturally occurring stream flow. |
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Wash and rinse reservoirs are internally baffled and spargers are included to improve the self cleaning capabilities of the system. |
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This method produces electricity to supply high peak demands by moving water between reservoirs at different elevations. |
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Parvaresh said high consumption and a lack of rain are leading to the rapid depletion of water in Tehran's reservoirs, in particular Lar and Latian. |
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Sabotage of dikes, canals, and reservoirs and deliberate flooding of rival states became a standard military tactic during the Warring States period. |
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They dug four large reservoirs in Shandong to regulate water levels, which allowed them to avoid pumping water from local sources and water tables. |
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In the United Kingdom, Thames Water has many underground reservoirs, sometimes also called cisterns, built in the 1800s, most of which are lined with brick. |
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She seemed to totally intuitively annunciate pain and fear and human weakness yet she seemed to have no idea where she had discovered these reservoirs, these hidden pools. |
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The most significant was Anoa Deep well WL-5X, which found gas in a new play beneath the Anoa field, testing at 17 mcfd from fractured Lama Formation sandstone reservoirs. |
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Lower positive impacts are found in the tropical regions, as it has been noted that the reservoirs of power plants in tropical regions produce substantial amounts of methane. |
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Since small hydro projects usually have minimal reservoirs and civil construction work, they are seen as having a relatively low environmental impact compared to large hydro. |
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Sometimes in such reservoirs, the new top water level exceeds the watershed height on one or more of the feeder streams such as at Llyn Clywedog in Mid Wales. |
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Gangs of men tried desperately to manoeuvre the engines right up to the river to fill their reservoirs, and several of the engines toppled into the Thames. |
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There are several other reservoirs in the vicinity including Megget Reservoir, Talla Reservoir and Fruid Reservoir whilst Daer Reservoir lies among the Lowther Hills. |
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The largest reservoirs, such as the Claerwen, are in the Elan Valley, and other notable bodies of water include Lake Vyrnwy, Talybont Reservoir and Llyn Brianne. |
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There are two large water supply reservoirs operated by Welsh Water. |
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Many towns and cities are located along rivers flowing from the hills and in northwest England the lack of natural aquifers is compensated for by reservoirs. |
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The major lakes and reservoirs in the National Park are given below. |
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In the late 1960s and early 1970s she was involved, as DPA chairman, with the disputes over the proposed construction of two new reservoirs on Dartmoor. |
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Hydraulic fracturing is used to increase the rate at which fluids, such as petroleum, water, or natural gas can be recovered from subterranean natural reservoirs. |
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The Texas Administrative Code lists 18 freshwater mussel sanctuaries within Texas stream segments and reservoirs with three being on the Sabine River in northeast Texas. |
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The Romans built many dams and reservoirs for water collection, such as the Subiaco Dams, two of which fed the Anio Novus, one of the largest aqueducts of Rome. |
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Following the Leeds Waterworks Act of 1867 three reservoirs were built at Lindley Wood, Swinsty, and Fewston in the Washburn Valley north of Leeds. |
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In the midwestern United States, they are not uncommon during winter near reservoirs and wildlife refuges that provide foraging opportunities at waterfowl concentrations. |
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Water supplies are sourced from several reservoirs, including Watergrove, Blackstone Edge, Greenbooth and Piethorne in Rochdale's outlying moorland. |
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The terminology for reservoirs varies from country to country. |
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Today all these reservoirs are managed by Severn Trent Water. |
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The two most northerly reservoirs on the course of the river were built to provide water to the Bradford area in the early 1900s by way of the Nidd Aqueduct. |
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Other sites such as Dolaucothi in south Wales was fed by at least 5 leats, all leading to reservoirs and tanks or cisterns high above the present opencast. |
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Mills needed reservoirs to supply the boilers and condense the steam. |
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These events may have been triggered by the filling or operation of the reservoir and are on a small scale when compared to the amount of reservoirs worldwide. |
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The Claerwen dam opened in 1952 and, later, the Clywedog dam, helped create reservoirs to supply the towns and cities of the English West Midlands. |
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These reagent reservoirs are compatible with various pipettes and make their dripless pour-off sprouts ideal for labs looking to save money and reagent. |
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The deliverables were a cyclostratigraphic and sedimentological model based on petrology and SEM analysis from core, describing the reservoirs and intervening seal rocks. |
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Thanks to above average precipitation that started falling in October 2004, many of Utah's boatable reservoirs and rivers will be on the rebound this summer. |
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This land had previously been the site of reservoirs which were filled in, reputedly with earth excavated during the construction of the Victoria line. |
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The major advantage of conventional hydroelectric dams with reservoirs is their ability to store water at low cost for dispatch later as high value clean electricity. |
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North Sea oil is a mixture of hydrocarbons, comprising liquid petroleum and natural gas, produced from petroleum reservoirs beneath the North Sea. |
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The natural pressure in most reservoirs, however, eventually dissipates. |
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The open-pit Conga project, located some 3,700 meters above sea level, involves moving the water from four lakes high in the mountains into reservoirs the company would build. |
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They used tiny semiconducting crystals that contain two separate reservoirs of electrons to explore the different influences of both classical and quantum physics. |
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Damming interrupts the flow of rivers and can harm local ecosystems, and building large dams and reservoirs often involves displacing people and wildlife. |
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Deep reservoirs with multiple level draw off towers can discharge deep cold water into the downstream river greatly reducing the size of any hypolimnion. |
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The collapse of the dam wall of one of these reservoirs in 1864 resulted in the Great Sheffield Flood, which killed 270 people and devastated large parts of the town. |
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These control vast stores of reservoirs of petroleum and natural gas. |
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However, there also are cases where BSR products formed relatively late diagenetically, such as in uplifted reservoirs after hydrocarbon migration. |
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Wells are drilled into oil reservoirs to extract the crude oil. |
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We obtained samples of plankton from limnetic and nearshore zones in aquatic habitats including springs, natural lakes, ephemeral pools, and reservoirs. |
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The Upper Derwent Valley reservoirs were built from the mid 20th century onward to supply drinking water to the East Midlands and South Yorkshire. |
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Where there are multiple uses of reservoirs such as water supply, recreation, and flood control, all reservoir evaporation is attributed to power production. |
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A method of active case detection to target reservoirs of asymptomatic malaria and gametocyte carriers in a rural area in Southern Province, Zambia. |
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The well is expected to be drilled to a true vertical depth of 12,500 to test multiple Lower Miocene age Marg and Discorbis sand reservoirs in a fault closure syncline. |
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The created reservoirs are similar to those of tidal barrages, except that the location is artificial and does not contain a preexisting ecosystem. |
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Watch for northern fulmars and sooty shearwaters near the coast, and wayward marine birds such as petrels and phalaropes at inland lakes and reservoirs. |
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Mowing lawns is believed to be a risk factor for acquiring tularemia in disease-endemic areas where lagomorph reservoirs may be killed by mowers or hedge trimmers. |
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The blue field represents the many waters of the county, its rivers and reservoirs, while the cross is green to mark the great areas of countryside. |
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The suslik fleas as reservoirs of plague virus during winter. |
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Larger heads store more potential energy for the same amount of water so the reservoirs for overshot and backshot wheels tend to be smaller than for breast shot wheels. |
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A study was conducted from January 2011 to January 2012 to introduce a new alternative rodenticide to control the reservoirs of ZCL in hyperendemic focus of Esfahan. |
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