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Cover image for Advanced tools and models to improve river basin management in Europe in the context of global change (AquaTerra)
Title:
Advanced tools and models to improve river basin management in Europe in the context of global change (AquaTerra)
Publication Information:
New York : IWA Publishing, 2010.
Physical Description:
xii, 99 p. : ill., maps ; 30 cm.
ISBN:
9781843393726
General Note:
"Developed from an integrated project of the 6th EU RTD Framework Programme ..."--P. [4] of cover.

"EU project number: 505428"--P. [4 of cover].

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Material Type
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30000010285268 TC455 A39 2010 f Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

Advanced Tools and Models to Improve River Basin Management in Europe in the Context of Climate Change - AquaTerra has developed from an integrated project of the 6th EU RTD Framework Programme that aims to provide the scientific basis for an improved river basin management through a better understanding of the river-sediment-soil-groundwater system as a whole, by integrating both natural and socio-economics aspects at different temporal and spatial scales.
This book aims: To provide better understanding of the river-sediment-soil-groundwater system at various temporal and spatial scales To relate expected climate alterations to changes in deposition, mobility and distribution of pollutants in European river basins To provide the scientific basis for improved river basin management To introduce novel tools for water and soil quality monitoring To show the necessity of integrated modelling frameworks for impact evaluation of pollution as well as climate and land-use changes for definition of long-term management schemes The work illustrates the dynamic behavior of the pathway of pollutants in soils, groundwater, surface water and sediments. It highlights the fundamental importance of integrating knowledge from several combined disciplines on various environmental compartments in order to understand the large number of processes that govern pollutant input, transport and turnover. Results shows that a significant step forward has been made in the development new analytical methods and of process-based numerical models that are capable of making predictions of likely trends and environmental changes to be expected in the near or distant future at the basin-scale. These models can be used e.g. to generate hydrologic scenarios based on climate models and to simulate pollutant distribution and turnover rates from decades to millennia.


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