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Opportunity for Effluent Treatment and Recycling Plant
Posted on 02 Mar, 2010 12:33 PM

Dear All,

Workshop on Developments in Waterless Urinals Technology on 6th March 2010 (Saturday), IIT Delhi
Posted on 01 Mar, 2010 05:05 PM

IIT Delhi is organizing a “Workshop on Developments in Waterless Urinals Technology” on 6th March 2010 (Saturday) at MicroModel Complex of IIT Delhi between 10 AM and 4 PM.

The objective of the proposed workshop is to create  awareness on the possibilities and potential of Waterless Urinals Technology among different stakeholders such as policy makers, practitioners, manufacturers and the general public.

Workshop on developments in waterless urinals technology on 6th March 2010
The article details the workshop on developments in waterless urinals technology in New Delhi. Posted on 01 Mar, 2010 04:55 PM

IIT Delhi is organizing a “Workshop on Developments in Waterless Urinals Technology” on 6th March 2010 (Saturday) at MicroModel Complex of IIT Delhi between 10 AM and 4 PM.

The objective of the proposed workshop is to create  awareness on the possibilities and potential of Waterless Urinals Technology among different stakeholders such as policy makers, practitioners, manufacturers and the general public.

Wetland mapping and conservation: Use of GIS
The article is about the wetlands management issues that is surrounded by confusion and lack of proper water management policies, and how this can be tackled using GIS. Posted on 01 Mar, 2010 04:35 PM

Guest post by Sangeeta Deogawanka

February 2nd, designated as World Wetlands Day, has quietly slipped by with isolated events that speak of the lackadaisical attitude towards this rich ecosystem.

With 67,429 wetlands covering an area of about 5.5 million hectares, [Ministry of Environment and Forests (MoEF), 1990], the wetland systems in India are diverse, found in high altitude cold zones, the hot and humid coastal areas or occurring as scattered inland wetland systems.

The Himalayan glaciers controversy - An article in Ground Report India
The article covers the four different aspects of the Himalayan glaciers controversy which had its origin in IPCC, 2007 report. Posted on 01 Mar, 2010 03:36 PM

Ground Report India

A huge controversy has been generated in recent days over the much quoted lines in the IPCC’s 2007 report: “Glaciers in the Himalaya are receding faster than in any part of the world and, if the present rate continues, the likelihood of them disappearing by the year 2035 and perhaps sooner is very high if the Earth keeps warming at the current rate” (Working Group 2, page 493). We do need to question how a statement of such magnitude, without peer review, made its way into the IPCC report. That it was discovered,externally, more than two years later raises concerns about both the mindset and the weakness of the processes of the IPCC in checking and correcting information they collate, information that is so vital in the global debate. However, to question the credibility of the science of the global warming, supported as it is by a wealth of empirical evidence, or to question IPCC’s work, as is happening in some quarters, is gross exaggeration and sometimes driven by dubious and malafide intentions.

Open Source GIS Training Program Calendar - March 2010, Chennai
Posted on 01 Mar, 2010 11:28 AM

Dear Patrons

kCube conducting the following Open Source GIS training programs during the month of March 2010 at Chennai

UMN MapServer – Open Source WebGIS – Three day Program – Match 10th – 12th 2010

Geology of India - DN Wadia - Macmillan publishers (1919)
Geology is the science and study of the composition, structure, physical properties, dynamics and history of the liquid and solid materials/matter that constitutes the Earth. Posted on 01 Mar, 2010 12:10 AM

The Geology of India by DN Wadia, a geologist with the Geological Survey of India, is considered to be one of the most important and complete reference works available today on the subject.

Contents
1. Physical features, 2. Stratigraphy of India, 3. The Archaean System, 4. The Dharwar System, 5. The Cuddapah System, 6. The Vindhyan System, 7. The Cambrian System, 8. The Silurian, Devonian and Lower Carboniferous Systems, 9, 10. The Gondwana System, 11. The Upper Carboniferous and Permian Systems, 12. The Triassic System, 13. The Jurassic System, 14, 15. The Cretaceous System, 16. The Deccan Trap, 17. The Tertiary Systems, 18. The Eocene System, 19. The Oligocene and Lower Miocene Systems, 20. The Siwalik System - Middle Miocene and Lower Pliocene, 21-24. The Pleistocene System, 25. Physiography, 26. Economic Geology, 27. Geology and Stratigraphy of Kashmir; Index. Total contents - 398 pages.

The book divides India into three main geological divisions - the triangular plateau of the peninsula, the mountainous or the extra-peninsular region bordering India on the west north and east, and the Indo-gangetic plain extending from the valley of the Indus to the valley of the Brahmaputra in Assam. The desert region of western Rajasthan is considered to be a unique fourth category, as it combines characteristics of two of the three main divisions.

Community-led total sanitation newsletter for February 2010
The highlights of the CLTS February 2010 newsletter features the details about the film on CLTS in the East Garo Hills of Meghalaya. Posted on 26 Feb, 2010 05:43 PM

CLTS

Community Led Total Sanitation (CLTS) is an innovative methodology for mobilising communities to completely eliminate open defecation (OD).

Communities are facilitated to conduct their own appraisal and analysis of open defecation (OD) and take their own action to become ODF (open defecation free).

Workshop on improving legal & regulatory efficiency for water management by IDLO and AT&T, New Delhi
Posted on 26 Feb, 2010 11:45 AM

IDLO

at&t

 

 

 

 

IDLO [International Development Law Organisation], in cooperation with American Telephone & Telegraph Company [AT&T India], is organizing a five-day capacity building program on “Improving Legal & Regulatory Efficiency for Water Resource Management in India” to be delivered on 22-26 March 2010 in New Delhi, India.

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