Showing posts with label erosion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label erosion. Show all posts

Monday, May 23, 2011

Learning from the Floods

As the Mississippi River's waters rise to levels unseen since the 1930s, and floodgates are opened to relieve pressure from the swollen river, scientists hope to turn these dire circumstances into an opportunity to study how the river behaves.

Researchers at Louisiana State University are looking at where the river will deposit sediment, the silt and sand in the water, and how the land around the river can be built up. In fact Louisiana has been losing about a football field of land per hour due to the fact that the Mississippi River has been engineered to prevent floods, and consequently it no longer drops sediment on the land, which is how the Mississippi River delta, including Louisiana and its cities, was formed. The absence of sediment also means the valuable wetlands are being lost, causing the loss of protection against hurricanes and storm surges from the sea.

Although devastating for many residents along the river, the terrible floods will allow scientists to determine how to stop the problem of land erosion. Observing how the silt is deposited and where it goes will reveal how to direct the silt to certain areas of land that can be built up. Then the flood waters could be directed to the areas that need the silt.

Go to the BBC's Science in Action programme of May 19 to hear more on this study.

Sunday, December 26, 2010

TEMA Foundation: Attentive to Turkey's Biodiversity

Founded in 1992 by Nihat Gokyigit, "TEMA has pioneered a multistakeholder approach to tackling the problem of soil erosion in Turkey." According to the Foundation's website, TEMA's "mission is to raise public awareness of environmental problems, specifically soil erosion, deforestation, biodiversity loss and climate change."

"Nihat Gokyigit was a successful business entrepreneur, presiding over one of Turkey's largest conglomerates (Tekfen Holdings) when he decided to start TEMA with renowned environmentalist Hayrettin Karaca. Having grown up in Artvin, a secluded and pristine part of Turkey, he wanted to identify livelihoods through which Turkey's people could preserve their nation's rich biodiversity rather than destroy it. His private foundation operates Turkey's most prominent botanical garden, which complements TEMA's work through botanic education and research."

Excerpt from Outstanding Social Entrepreneurs 2010, the Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship

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