DSpace Repository

Browsing Urban Lakes in India : Conservation, Management and Rejuvenation-Part-I, 20-21 October 2005 at Udaipur (Rajasthan) by Issue Date

Browsing Urban Lakes in India : Conservation, Management and Rejuvenation-Part-I, 20-21 October 2005 at Udaipur (Rajasthan) by Issue Date

Sort by: Order: Results:

  • Rai, S. P.; Kumar, Bhishm; Nachiappan, Rm. P. (National Institute of Hydrology, 2005)
    Lake Nainital is one among a group of lakes occurring in the southern fringe of the Kumaun Lesser Himalaya. Bhimtal, Naukuchiatal and Sattal, popularly known as the Lake Region of Bhimtal are located in close proximity ...
  • Pandey, Usha; Pandey, J. (National Institute of Hydrology, 2005)
    The present research is an effort to invesitigate the effects of catchment modifications on chemical and biological characteristics of two freshwater tropical lakes of Udaipur, Rajasthan. The lakes, Fateh sagar and Bari, ...
  • Verma, P. C.; Sharma, L. L.; Sarang, Niranjan; Kumar, Anil; Hegde, A. G. (National Institute of Hydrology, 2005)
    This paper presents the results obtained on thermal ecological studies carried out at Rana Pratap Sagar (RPS) lake during 2002 — 2004. The study includes monitoring of several water quality parameters, biological & bacterial ...
  • Rao, V. V. S. Gurunadha (National Institute of Hydrology, 2005)
    Hyderabad metropolis is one of the fastest growing populations in India and has previously relied on surface water storages in lakes for urban water supply. Reported impacts on groundwater around Hyderabad urban ...
  • Rawat, Ajay S.; Shah, G. L. (National Institute of Hydrology, 2005)
    Nainital lake region is one of the important lake regions of the new state of Uttaranchal. It has situated on the terminus of the lesser Himalayan ranges. The lake sprawls over an area of roughly 200 sq. Km and there ...
  • Sharma, S.; Sharma, A. K. (National Institute of Hydrology, 2005)
    The landscape is a composite system where the hydrological factors play an important role. It has been unfortunate that the human race has silently damaged many a water body in the ecosystem. The population, affluence and ...
  • Tripathi, Manisha (National Institute of Hydrology, 2005)
    NainiTal the tourist paradise represents the Kumaun hill environment in all its richness and diversity- physical, social, economic and cultural and with all the attending characteristics like the pride of the hill people ...
  • Bindhu, B. K.; Mohan, S. (National Institute of Hydrology, 2005)
    To improve the availability of both quality and quantity of water supply systems, it is necessary to improve the knowledge on tropical lakes and reservoirs. Modeling of lakes and reservoirs is extremely complex and is ...
  • Dube, Anumeha; Jayaraman, Girija (National Institute of Hydrology, 2005)
    Chilika Lagoon (19°28'N and 19°54'N and 85°06'E and 85°36'E) is the largest brackish water lagoon with estuarine character. The present study is aimed at studying the seasonal variability of plankton in Chilika through a ...
  • Raju, K. Srinivasa (National Institute of Hydrology, 2005)
    The present study deals with the application of Genetic Algorithms (GA) for irrigation planning. The GA technique is used to evolve optimum cropping pattern for maximizing net benefits for the case study of Jayakwadi ...
  • Mathur, S. M.; Mathur, Priti (National Institute of Hydrology, 2005)
    Aquatic plants have created havoc all over the world. Natural aquatic plants population to some extent is healthy for any aquatic ecosystem as it serves as fish feed, plays an important role in nutrient cycling, purify the ...
  • Dwivedi, V. K.; Mani, Pankaj; Sarvanakumar, U. (National Institute of Hydrology, 2005)
    In the present study, 21°Pb and 137Cs dating techniques have been employed to determine the recent sedimentation rates in Nainital, Bhimtal, Sat-tal, Naukuchiyatal lakes of Uttaranchal, Mansar and Dal-Nagin lakes of Jammu ...
  • Singh, Manwinder; Kumar, Vijay; Saini, P. L. (National Institute of Hydrology, 2005)
    The free floating weeds (Eichhornia crassipes, Lemna minor, etc.) and submerged aquatic weeds like Hydrilla verticillata, Vallisneria zannichelia, Chara sp., Algae, Potamogeton natans, etc. are problematic aquatic weeds ...
  • Jeppiaar; Krishnan, Radha; Manoharan, N. (National Institute of Hydrology, 2005)
    Water quality of the fresh surface water sources like lakes and reservoirs are degraded by human activities. Industrial effluents and domestic sewage with high organic wastes are the main source for pollution in urban ...
  • Chari, K. B.; Abbasi, S. A. (National Institute of Hydrology, 2005)
    The most evident, dramatic, and conclusive evidence of the gross pollution of any lake due to urbanization is provided by aquatic weeds. Whereas industrial pollution may or may not add plant nutrients to a lake, demographic ...
  • Pathak, Suparn; Sharma, J. R. (National Institute of Hydrology, 2005)
    In the recent years, Udaipur, the city of lakes is facing a major problem of insufficient water reaching to the lakes from the catchment during rains and consequently drying of lakes. This has resulted in economic losses ...
  • Mishra, P. C.; Patel, R. K. (National Institute of Hydrology, 2005)
    Bhubaneswar, the temple city of Orissa, has about 500 and odd temples confined mostly to old town areas. For different rituals to be performed daily each temples has one or more water tanks nearby. Some are quite small but ...
  • Mahar, P. S.; Singh, R. P. (National Institute of Hydrology, 2005)
    Surface water bodies are mainly polluted by non-point sources such as runoff from cropped lands. The pollution levels in the lake water can be maintained within acceptable levels to obtain maximum possible profit from the ...
  • Kumar, K. Mahesh; Rao, V. V. S. Gurunadha; Sankaran, S.; Prakash, B. A.; Yadaiah, P. (National Institute of Hydrology, 2005)
    Lake water budget study in Mir-Alam Tank has covered hydrological, geohydrological, geophysical and water quality analyses, lake water quality, trophic status, groundwater flow and mass transport modeling studies in the ...
  • Meena, Narendra K. (National Institute of Hydrology, 2005)
    Sambhar Lake covers an area of about 90 km2 is the Largest Saline Playa Lake in India extending in SW-NE direction. The lake represents a closed drainage basin receiving the major sediment and water influx by the monsoonal ...

Search DSpace


Advanced Search

Browse

My Account