Three Gorges

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    I must say you make some good points but I’m still unconvinced. Your opinion is very biased, you only look at the worst things about the reservoir and rarely address the pros the dam has provided. When you do you talk about them it is very briefly. There are many good things the dam has created. The reservoir created by the Glen Canyon Dam has provided many economic benefits. The reservoir currently has over 8,200 residents. In addition, about 4 million visiting tourists bring in $2.5 million…

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    Reversible and Irreversible Processes in a Hydroelectric Dam In Thermodynamics, there are two main processes that take place in our environment: reversible processes and irreversible processes. Reversible processes are said to be ideal processes that seldom occur. Irreversible processes are the processes that can be easily found in nature and that occur naturally. It is said that when a system experiences a change to its initial state while moving to its final state, the system has undergone…

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    Amazon Basin Dam

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    #1- How will the dam affect the environment in a positive way? The dam on the in the Amazon Basin will cause a positive impact on the environment. Conversely, the dam will reduce the consumption of fossil fuel for electricity reproduction. Opposing to many environmentalists that believe that the dam will make a negative impact on the environment by causing waste and pollution. But the structure will reduce air pollution by using hydroelectric power to help control and stop flooding. Instead…

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    Glen Canyon Dam Effects

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    In this research paper I will be exploring some specific ways the Glen Canyon Dam has impacted the Glen Canyon, Grand Canyon and the Colorado River. I will explore the motivation for the construction of the Glen Canyon Dam, and discuss both the positive and negative changes the Glen Canyon Dam has inflicted. Although there are a plethora of impacts, I will be focusing only on those that have influenced the geomorphology of the area. Of these impacts I will concentrate on the negative impacts…

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    Before the glittering lights of Las Vegas, there was a desolate wasteland of barren desert and flash floods that now houses the largest man-made lake in the United States as well as the 18th largest dam in the entire world. Back then, the Hoover Dam was the largest structure of its time, standing seven-hundred and twenty-six feet tall with, “Enough concrete to build a road from New York to San Francisco,” (National Park Service 1). Due to its unprecedented size and the minute section of time…

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    Atchafalaya River History

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    launches and a primitive camping area, located near the Old River Lock, are open year-round and are provided to the public free of charge. The highest use of these areas occurs during the fall and winter when hunting season is open on the adjacent Three Rivers State Wildlife Management Area. White-tailed deer, gray and fox squirrels, feral hogs, and wild turkey are the most popular wildlife that are hunted in the area. Recreational and commercial fishing is equally as popular because of the easy…

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    Condit Dam Case Study

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    is related to the actual electrical power a dam can create in kilowatts. The formal equation for power is, according to the Wisconsin Valley Improvement Company, “(Height of Dam) x (River Flow) x (Efficiency) / 11.8” (“How Hydropower Works”). The three factors to the equation are relatively self-explanatory. Height of the dam refers to the distance the water falls measured in feet. River flow is the amount of water that flows in the river in cubic feet per second. Efficiency, the most…

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    The op-ed piece from the New York Times, “Tear Down Deadbeat Dams” by Yvon Chouinard, and the Outsiders magazine article “Blow Up” by Bruce Barcott both argue that the construction of dams has been extremely harmful to the natural world. Even though they are similar in idea and argument, the ways they communicate their message differ. I will analyze: FINISH “Blow Up” is structured very much like a story in that Barcott gives the reader a sequence of events; we dammed and we dammed and we dammed…

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    The dam we are planning to build will not only help the environment it will slow down global warming and grow more crops for human consumption. This dam can also be used for irrigation purposes like growing crops for humans and animals alike. You can also use this water as clean drinking water. The salmon population will maintain similar to what was before because ninety-seven percent still survive. It will slow down global warming by not having us burn coal for energy creating greenhouse gases…

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    Beaver Research Paper

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    The dams hold back running water and in a few weeks, there is a deep new pond. Once the pond is about three feet deep, beavers build a lodge (Cavendish). The lodge is a room with underwater passageways that deny access to predators (Cavendish). They are nocturnal animals, doing most of their work during the night like cutting down trees. Once the tree is…

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