PUMPING UP THE FOSSIL WATER (GROUNDWATER),DOESNT RESOLVES THE PROBLEM FOR PEOPLE'S NEEDS.THESE NATURAL TANKS ARE HAVING A SIGNIFACANCE ROLE FOR THE UNDERGROUND LIFE'S ENVIRONMENT,WHICH WE HAVEN'T YET STUDIED CAREFULLY.
LANDS LIKE SAUDI ARABIA HAVE MODERN SOLUTIONS WHICH CAN OFFER PLENTY OF WATER,EITHER BY ORGANIZING BETTER CONSERVATION POLICIES(MIN.CONSUMPTION,RECYCLING,USE AND DEPOSIT OF RAIN WATER,TRADITIONAL LOCAL PLANTATION AND NOT DEVELOPING ONE WHICH DOESNT BELONG TO THE CLIMA OF THE MENTIONED TERRITORY ETC) OR BY USING THE NEWER METHODS,WITH GREEN ENERGY FOR DESALINATION OF THE SEAWATER (EG.COMBINATION OF SUN-WIND POWER ENERGY PRODUCTION FOR DESALINATION PURPOSES AND NOT ONLY ETC ).
IT IS VERY EASY FOR COUNTRIES LIKE SAUDI ARABIA TO FINANCE SUCH RESEARCH AND PROJECTS WHICH CAN AUGMENT THE PARTICIPATION OF DESALINATED SEAWATER ,FOR HUMAN ACTIVITIES,FROM 8% UP TO 50%.EVEN IF THEY ALREADY HAVE INVESTED AT LARGE SCALE DESALINATION PLANTS,THE USED ENERGY ISN'T CARBON FREE.
WE CAN READ ABOUT SUCH AN IDEA ,ONLY A SOLAR ONE,AT AUSTRALIA ,IF WE CLIK ON THE TITLED LINK.
THANK YOU
AGGELOS
Searching for Water under the Sands of Saudi Arabia
Water is scarce in arid Saudi Arabia. Now the king has hired a team of German scientists to search for groundwater trapped in aquifers beneath the massive kingdom's sands. Their pioneering work could provide solutions for other desert countries.
German geologist Randolf Rausch, 59, is showing his visitors the desert. He walks nimbly across the narrow crest of a sand dune, pointing his toes outward like a ballet dancer. The wind blows away his tracks immediately and tugs at his green Tyrolean hat.
The guests, who are from the southwestern German city of Darmstadt, trudge along behind him, panting in the silence. The air temperature in the Ad Dahna Desert at this time of the year is only about 32 degrees Celsius (90 degrees Fahrenheit), which is 20 degrees Celsius cooler than in the summer. The air is dry, clear and odorless. Rausch stops at the highest point on the dune and gazes out over a seemingly endless landscape of shimmering, copper-colored dunes.
"This here," he says, with a strong Swabian accent, "is every geologist's dream."
Finding Fossil Groundwater
Rausch has been working for GTZ International Services, part of Germany's federal GTZ development agency, in Riyadh for the last six years. The Saudi king has hired him and his visitors, who are from the Technical University of Darmstadt, to search for water in the desert. By drilling holes up to 2,000 meters (6,560 feet) deep, conducting pumping tests, and applying complex measuring techniques and computer models, they are trying to find out how much fossil groundwater remains stored between layers of rock beneath the Arabian Peninsula.
The Helmholtz Center for Environmental Research (UFZ) in the eastern German city of Leipzig is also involved in the large-scale project. "Using....(more at http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,684360-2,00.html )
SOURCE DERSPIEGEL
Labels: ecology
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