Introduction To A Symposium On Geohydrology Of The Indus River, West Pakistan ? Introduction

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
A. K. Snelgrove
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
27
File Size:
2657 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1967

Abstract

At a time when water resource planning is proceeding on a continental scale, such as the proposed $100 billion North American Water and Power Alliance, which would redistribute water among three nations, including seven provinces of Canada, 35 of the United States, and three States of Mexico, the selection of a single river basin for study may seem to require an apologia. None is offered because of ( 1) the magnitude of the Indus , itself a part of the great Indo-Gangetic Plain drainage system, with Himalayan sources, upon which the thickly populated northern sub-continent of Indo-Pakistan depends for agriculture and hydroelectic power; (2) the extraordinary problems created by dismemberment of the world?s largest irrigation system through legal beheading of the Eastern Waters under the Indus Waters Treaty of 1960; and (3) the herculean effort to contain the twin encroachments of waterlogging and salinization in a basin which faces a shortage of fresh water. The British irrigation system of barrages and canals on the Indus was a venture admirable in conception. Unfortunately, it is now a legacy burdened with unwanted consequences, due to interference with the hydrological regimen, particularly the rise of water table occasioned by leakage.
Citation

APA: A. K. Snelgrove  (1967)  Introduction To A Symposium On Geohydrology Of The Indus River, West Pakistan ? Introduction

MLA: A. K. Snelgrove Introduction To A Symposium On Geohydrology Of The Indus River, West Pakistan ? Introduction. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1967.

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