Australian freshwater algae
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The genesis of this book lay in uranium mining, its continuation and completion in government or quasi-government agencies to do with the water supply of a nation. Freshwater algae have not fared well in the competition for taxonomic attention in the world's driest inhabited continent. About 25 years ago proposals to mine uranium at a number of sites in the catchment of the South Alligator River in tropical Australia led to the establishment of a Commission of Enquiry by the Australian Government. The region, adjacent to the large aboriginal territory of Arnhem Land, was sparsely inhabited and poorly studied. It is now a World Heritage Area and the natural bounty that makes it so was recognised then by the Commission of Enquiry. The report to government of that commission recommended a wide-ranging environmental and biological survey before mining commenced and the development of an ongoing monitoring programme to detect any deleterious effects of mining on a valued environment.
Buchkauf
Australian freshwater algae, H. U. Ling
- Sprache
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 2000
Lieferung
Zahlungsmethoden
Deine Änderungsvorschläge
- Titel
- Australian freshwater algae
- Sprache
- Englisch
- Autor*innen
- H. U. Ling
- Verlag
- Cramer in der Gebr.-Borntraeger-Verl.-Buchh.
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 2000
- ISBN10
- 3443600328
- ISBN13
- 9783443600327
- Reihe
- Bibliotheca phycologica
- Kategorie
- Biologie
- Beschreibung
- The genesis of this book lay in uranium mining, its continuation and completion in government or quasi-government agencies to do with the water supply of a nation. Freshwater algae have not fared well in the competition for taxonomic attention in the world's driest inhabited continent. About 25 years ago proposals to mine uranium at a number of sites in the catchment of the South Alligator River in tropical Australia led to the establishment of a Commission of Enquiry by the Australian Government. The region, adjacent to the large aboriginal territory of Arnhem Land, was sparsely inhabited and poorly studied. It is now a World Heritage Area and the natural bounty that makes it so was recognised then by the Commission of Enquiry. The report to government of that commission recommended a wide-ranging environmental and biological survey before mining commenced and the development of an ongoing monitoring programme to detect any deleterious effects of mining on a valued environment.