|
Hamutoko, J., Mapani, B., Ellmies, R., Bittner, A., & Külls, C. (2014). A fingerprinting method for the identification of uranium sources in alluvial aquifers: An example from the Khan and Swakop Rivers, Namibia. Physics and Chemistry of the Earth, Parts A/B/C, 72, 34–42.
|
|
|
de Jong, I. J. H., Arif, S. S., Gollapalli, P. K. R., Neelam, P., Nofal, E. R., Reddy, K. Y., et al. (2021). Improving agricultural water productivity with a focus on rural transformation*. Irrigation and Drainage, 70(3), 458–469.
Abstract: ABSTRACT As a result of population growth, economic development and climate change, feeding the world and providing water security will require important changes in the technologies, institutions, policies and incentives that drive present-day water management, as captured in Goal 6.4 of the Millennium Development Goals. Irrigation is the largest and most inefficient water user, and there is an expectation that even small improvements in agricultural water productivity will improve water security. This paper argues that improvements in irrigation water productivity involves a complex and comprehensive rural transformation that goes beyond mere promotion of water saving technologies. Many of the measures to improve water productivity require significant changes in the production systems of farmers and in the support provided to them. Looking forward, water use and competition over water are expected to further increase. By 2025, about 1.8 billion people will be living in regions or countries with absolute water scarcity. Demand for water will rise exponentially, while supply becomes more erratic and uncertain, prompting the need for significant shifts of inter-sectoral water allocation to support continued economic growth. Advances in the use of remote sensing technologies will make it increasingly possible to cost-effectively and accurately estimate crop evapotranspiration from farmers’ fields.
|
|
|
Strandmann, P. A. E. P. von, Reynolds, B. C., Porcelli, D., James, R. H., Calsteren, P. van, Baskaran, M., et al. (2006). Assessing continental weathering rates and actinide transport in the Great Artesian Basin. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 70(18, Supplement), 497.
|
|
|
French, K. (2022). Indigenous knowledge, water management, and learning from our collective past. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, 68, 101466.
|
|
|
Heaton, T. H. E. (1984). Sources of the nitrate in phreatic groundwater in the western Kalahari. Journal of Hydrology, 67(1), 249–259.
Abstract: Elevated levels of nitrate occur in phreatic groundwater in the western Kalahari, Namibia. Nitrate in water containing 0.4–3.1 meq NO−3l−1, of widespread occurrence, has δ15N values in the range +4.9 to +8.0‰, suggesting natural derivation from the soil. The sporadic occurrence of very high levels of nitrate (> 4 meq NO−3l−1), which has δ15N between +9.3 to +18.7‰, reflects pollution derived from animal waste. The importance of considering the possible isotopic effects of denitrification, and the significance of leaching in the nitrogen budget of the Kalahari soil, are also discussed.
|
|