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- Water Harvesting Techniques Prevalent In The Western Himalaya
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The Western Himalayas The Himalayan mountains bind India in the north by one continuous chain of gigantic peaks. The western half, which stretches from the Kashmir valley to the hills of Uttarancha... |
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- Catch Water Newsletter August 2000
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CAMPAIGN People fight back Delhi Harvesting Centre goes for decentralisation NETWORKING Enhancing public understanding Initiating solutions Spreading the good word Youth for action Agents of change INITIATIVE A quest for water ... |
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- Catch Water Newsletter December 2001
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INITIATIVE Net power A New beginning... Valuing the raindrop Irrigation cooperatives Showing the way Sarovar saved As things gets tough the tough get going! NETWORKING Catch Water is now in Gujarat, Tamil and Hindi Get your free... |
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- One In A Million Registration
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"There are Millions of people in the world - but it just takes one to make a difference! To make a difference - do something important - it has to start somewhere and with somebody. Start now! Be Somebody! Be One In A Million!" Melissa Poe. The ... |
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- History's Wisdom...
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Bhuj Bhuj, a town in the Kutch district, was a walled city in the past. But today only remnants of the city wall can be seen. There were once three large tanks in the town - Hamirsar, t... |
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- Groundwater Dams - Rainwaterharvesting.org
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Any land anywhere can be used to harvest rainwater The fundamental reason: extend the fruits of the monsoon The basic principle: Catch water where it falls TRADITIONAL Indigenous systems MODERN Contempo... |
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- Rainwater Harvesting Potential of Delhi
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Practices and Practitioners Delhi The national capital territory, (NCT), of Delhi receives 611 mm of rainfall on an average annually and the number of rainy days are as low as 20-30. (A rainy day is spe... |
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- Water Harvesting Systems : Traditional Systems
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THAR DESERT Kunds / Kundis A kund or kundi looks like an upturned cup nestling in a saucer. These structures harvest rainwater for drinking, and dot the sandier tracts of the Thar Desert in w... |
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- Bamboo Drip Irrigation of the Noartheastern Hills - Rainwaterharvesting.org
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Any land anywhere can be used to harvest rainwater The fundamental reason: extend the fruits of the monsoon The basic principle: Catch water where it falls TRADITIONAL Indigenous systems MODERN Contempo... |
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- History's Wisdom...
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Rajasthan's Water Fort Chittor fort nestles in the Aravalli Hills at the eastern border of the Thar desert. It is perched on the top of a huge oval hill about 152 m high. It is a water for... |
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