The Colorado River Basin is divided into upper and lower portions. It provides water to the Colorado River, a water source that serves 40 million people over seven states in the southwestern ...
The publication of the Nomination file, including the maps and names, does not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever of the World Heritage Committee or of the Secretariat of UNESCO concerning ...
Welcome back to The Runoff, where Aspen Journalism’s Water Desk provides insider news and water-related updates you won’t ...
Here’s how big the Yangtze is. A third of all the inhabitants of China (which means more than 400 million people) live in the area covered by the Yangtze’s river basin. The Yangtze basin provides ...
The water cycle close water cycleThe system where water is constantly moving above, on or below the earth’s surface and is changing state. is also known as the hydrological cycle. Seas and ...
The Amur (Heilong) river basin of north-east Asia, home of the critically endangered Amur leopard, the endangered Amur tiger and a tremendous wealth of biodiversity, is under increasing pressures from ...
Compared to many of the world’s river systems, the Orinoco is relatively intact. But this may not last for long as the river and its surrounding areas are threatened by pollution and mining activities ...
Learn about physical characteristics of the Colorado River basin, including climate, rock type, soils, vegetation and river flow. Need for water management Water management is needed on the ...
Following the devastation brought by Severe Tropical Storm “Kristine” in the Bicol Region, President Marcos on Saturday said he plans to revisit the Bicol River Basin Development Program (BRBDP), a ...
The Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director of the Ogun-Osun River Basin Development Authority, Dr Deji Ashiru, has ...
The playful North American river otter is equally at home in the water and on land. It makes its home in a burrow near the water's edge, and can thrive in river, lake, swamp, or estuary ecosystems.
Chinook salmon have returned to the Klamath Basin for the first time since the construction of hydroelectric dams on the Klamath River in 1912, the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife announced.