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Tackling Dust
Tackling Dust Posted by Frank van Steenbergen and Marta Agujetas March 09/03/2018 Planting trees, shrubs and grasses along the road … Continued
By Frank van Steenbergen Noctilucent clouds seen over Amsterdam They are visible very, very rarely: lighting up in some nights, around the solstice. Yet when they light up, they create a specter like no other, lines and hues of glow high up the sky. They are called – true to their appearance – noctilucent clouds: clouds that shine at night. The other name they have describes how they are seen from the sky: polar mesospheric clouds. These are not normal clouds. The noctilucent clouds are placed an incredible 80 kilometers high at the end of the mesosphere. This is high above the stratosphere where life on earth takes place, and our climate plays out. The air is incredibly thin in the mesosphere. There is some dust, a very little ice vapour: the air is more than 1000 times more arid than the Sahara, yet enough to form thin cuspy clouds. By comparison the clouds we normally see are placed between… Continued
Tackling Dust Posted by Frank van Steenbergen and Marta Agujetas March 09/03/2018 Planting trees, shrubs and grasses along the road … Continued
Using hydrological modelling to improve drainage in Polder 26, Bangladesh Posted by Flavia Simona Cosoveanu, Anisul Haque, and Marta Agujetas … Continued
We have a deal for you… Posted by Frank van Steenbergen March 23, 2018 We have a deal for you. … Continued
The potential of Roadwater Harvesting: A Malawian Demonstration Posted by Macpherson Nthara and Abraham Abhishek March 21, 2018 Farmers examining … Continued
Igunga ecovillage: a success story from the water scarcity trenches Posted by Eduardo Tovar López March 20, 2018 Igunga is one … Continued
Food Miles Posted by Mekdelawit Messay Deribe December 18,2017 Food Miles. Does it ring any bells? If yes, great! If … Continued
Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals(EDCs) Posted by Mekdelawit Messay Deribe December 11,2017 More than 25 years ago, a group of school kids … Continued
Turkana: From Desolation to Hope by Recognizing the Potential of Floods Posted by Elly Yaluk and Loes van der Pluijm … Continued
Glaciers in Tajikistan: Pulling the Climate Change Trigger Posted by Frank van Steenbergen and Jonathan Demenge November 13, 2017 With … Continued
The Badakhshan Landslide By Frank van Steenbergen and Marta Agujetas Perez November 7, 2017 We are in Badakhshan. This is … Continued
A Lecture on Water, by Professor Nature By Blessings Jeranji September 29, 2017 Water has obvious beneficial effects for the … Continued
by Cecilia Borgia October 03, 2017 This story is about the ingenuity of women and men farmers in Lanzarote island … Continued
Postcard from Mbitini: Roads against Drought by Bobsammy Mwende Munyoki & Luwieke Bosma August 29, 2017 Kenya: an economy that … Continued
‘Bajajs’: Filling the Mobility Gap in Rural Ethiopia Posted by Abraham Abhishek, Cecilia Borgia, and Kebede Manjur July 17, 2017 … Continued
Postcard from Marracuene, Mozambique Posted by Frank van Steenbergen June 30, 2017 A civilization is measured by its care and … Continued
Rice growing in the water Blogpost by: Palal Moet Moet Do you know how to sow rice in deep water? … Continued
Lake Malawi: The Vanishing Blessing Blogpost by: Blessings Jeranji Shores of lake Malawi, everyday business Malawi as a country has … Continued
Gash – The Traveler Blogpost by Ahmed A. Bagi Alamin She starts her journey in Asmara City, and she always … Continued
Creating opportunity out of a problem: the hidden cotton plant Blogpost by Celestine Kilongosi Calotropis procera tree is one among … Continued
Starving the Tihama: Impact of War on Spate Irrigation Systems in Yemen Posted by Adel Zolail and Frank van Steenbergen … Continued