Availability of water in the Kabul Basin, Afghanistan.
Material type: TextSeries: ; (Fact sheet ; 2010-3037)Publication details: [Reston, VA] : International Water Resources Branch, U.S. Geological Survey, U.S. Department of the Interior, 2010.Description: 4 p. : col. ill., col. maps ; 28 cmSubject(s): DDC classification:- Pamphlet TD 313 .A3 .A93 /2010/ + /PDF/(3.72MB)
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Books | Afghanistan Centre at Kabul University | Pamphlet TD 313 .A3 .A93 /2010/ + /PDF/(3.72MB) (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 21851 | |||
Books | Afghanistan Centre at Kabul University | Available | 21852 |
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Pamphlet RA 990 .A34 .G464 /1989 General report of clinics monitored in Kandahar Province : March-April 1989 / Coordination of Medical Committees (CMC). | B 16.4 WAL -3373 Understanding pictures: a study in the design of appropriate visual materials for education in developing countries / by David Addison Walker | Pamphlet HV 6433 .A34 .N64 /2007 Coalition warfare in Afghanistan : burden-sharing or disunity / Timo Noetzel, Sibylle Scheipers. | Pamphlet TD 313 .A3 .A93 /2010/ + /PDF/(3.72MB) Availability of water in the Kabul Basin, Afghanistan. | Availability of water in the Kabul Basin, Afghanistan. | B 4.3831 MFA -29 Undeclared war : armed intervention and other forms of interference in the internal affairs of the Democratic Afghan Republic | Pamphlet Z 3016 .P68 1979 Bibliography of American periodical literature on Afghanistan, 1890 to 1946 / by Leila Poullada. |
Caption title.
“May 2010”.
“prepared in cooperation with the Afghanistan Geological Survey under the auspices of the U.S. Agency for International Development”—at head of title.
“USGS science for a changing world ; USAID”—at head of title.
Abstract: The availability of water resources is vital to the social and economic well being and rebuilding of Afghanistan. Kabul City currently (2010) has a population of nearly 4 million and is growing rapidly as a result of periods of relative security and the return of refugees. Population growth and recent droughts have placed new stresses on the city's limited water resources and have caused many wells to become contaminated, dry, or inoperable in recent years. The projected vulnerability of Central and West Asia to climate change (Cruz and others, 2007; Milly and others, 2005) and observations of diminishing glaciers in Afghanistan (Molnia, 2009) have heightened concerns for future water availability in the Kabul Basin of Afghanistan—(p. 1).