dali48 and writing books and cycling and photographing & identifying a linden leaf in the park of Wickrath etc.
29.01.2014 - Water crisis and desalination of sea water in 2024 etc. by dali48
dali48 and private tuition and writing books and photographing a gold fish in Lake Morper in Erkrath etc.
18.06.2012 - Interpretation of dali48
After researching the topic, I believe it is worth it to invest in wastewater to drinking water technologies. The ecological and environmental risk of not doing so is great - the byproducts of the non-treated wastewater and solid waste threatens ecosystems and endangered species... (by Direxmd)
We may face serious water problems (see drinking-water, etc. - d.48), if we will not use our water supply well... (UNDP, Gen Howitzer)
The years of 1930 -1938 were a time of drought throughout the United States (see deserts, etc. - d.48). This time of drought caused one of the largest population shifts in U.S. History... (by newcapo)
Future crisis:
1 Shortage of Air, 2 Water, 3 Room, 4 Raw materials, etc.
Youth protest against the world of fathers because of: lack of perspective, threat, frustration and sense of loss... (C. Thompson)
Individual growth and technological advances now create more harm than good... Environmental destruction, the threat of ecological collapse, armament and nuclear disaster... (W. Hollstein)
Greed is in Buddhism, one of the worst evils of which a person can be infected. In fact, possessiveness is of one of the main reasons for misery in the world, and how much bitter enmity exists between... (T. Suzuki)
It is estimated that more people die of the consequences of lack of water than in wars or of HIV/Aids. Solutions of water problems are being discussed every 3 years at the World Water Conference... (DW-World, 15.03.2009)
Comment for dali48 on HP
Debby Bruck
Forward thinking. Next to our air quality, water sustains life. We must clean it up and keep it clean. It does make financial, ecological and total sense...
dali48 Author
Thank you for your Comment DB. The second part of this Hub you can find on http://www.dali48.blogspot.com
Interpretation of dali48
Water crisis is a general term used to describe a situation where the available water within a region is less than the region's demand. The term has been used to describe the availability of potable water in a variety of regions by the United Nations and other world organizations...
Lawrence Smith, the president of the population institute, asserts that although an overwhelming majority of the planet is composed of water, 97% of this water is constituted of saltwater; the fresh water used to sustain humans is only 3% of the total amount of water on Earth...
Waterborne diseases and the absence of sanitary domestic water are one of the leading causes of death worldwide. For children under age five, waterborne diseases are the leading cause of death...
According to the World Bank, 88 percent of all waterborne diseases are caused by unsafe drinking water, inadequate sanitation and poor hygiene...
A 2006 United Nations report focuses on issues of governance as the core of the water crisis, saying "There is enough water for everyone" and "Water insufficiency is often due to mismanagement, corruption...
On Madagascar’s highland plateau, a massive transformation occurred that eliminated virtually all the
heavily forested vegetation in the period 1970 to 2000...
Water deficits, which are already spurring heavy grain imports in numerous smaller countries, may soon do the same in larger countries, such as China and India...
According to a UN climate report, the Himalayan glaciers that are the sources of Asia's biggest rivers - Ganges, Indus, Brahmaputra, Yangtze, Mekong, Salween and Yellow - could disappear by...
The west coast of North America, which gets much of its water from glaciers in mountain ranges such as the Rocky Mountains and Sierra Nevada, also would be affected...
Construction of wastewater treatment plants and reduction of groundwater over-drafting appear to be
obvious solutions to the worldwide problem...
Wind and solar power such as this installation in a village in northwest Madagascar can make a difference in safe water supply...
As new technological innovations continue to reduce the capital cost of desalination, more countries are building desalination plants as a small element in addressing their water crises...
A novel approach to desalination is the Seawater Greenhouse which takes seawater and uses solar energy to desalinate it in conjunction with growing food crops in a specially adapted greenhouse... (Wikipedia)
15.04.2024 — One solution to meet the growing demand for freshwater is desalination, which involves removing the salt from seawater to produce drinking water ...
29.01.2014 - The Chiricahua and Plant food and Ceremonies etc. by dali48
dali48 and writing books and cycling and photographing a white feather in the park of Wickrath etc.
3/2010 - Interpretation of dali48The most important plant food used by the Chiricahua was the Century plant (also known as mescal or agave). The crowns (the tuberous base portion) of this plant (which were baked in large underground ovens and sun-dried) and also the shoots were used. Other plants utilized by the Chiricahua include: agarita (or algerita) berries, alligator juniper berries, anglepod seeds, banana yucca (or datil, broadleaf yucca) fruit, chili peppers, chokecherries, cota (used for tea), currants, dropseed grass seeds, Gambel oak acorns, Gambel oak bark (used for tea), grass seeds (of various varieties), greens (of various varieties), hawthorne fruit, Lamb's-quarters leaves, lip ferns (used for tea), live oak acorns, locust blossoms, locust pods, maize kernels (used for tiswin), mesquite beans, mulberries, narrowleaf yucca blossoms, narrowleaf yucca stalks, nipple cactus fruit, one-seed juniper berries, onions, pigweed seeds, pinyon nuts, pitahaya fruit, prickly pear fruit, prickly pear juice, raspberries, screwbean (or tornillo) fruit, saguaro fruit, spurge seeds, strawberries, sumac (Rhus microcarpa) berries, sunflower seeds, tule rootstocks, tule shoots, pigweed tumbleweed seeds, unicorn plant seeds, walnuts, western yellow pine inner bark (used as a sweetener), western yellow pine nuts, whitestar potatoes (Ipomoea lacunosa), wild grapes, wild potatoes (Solanum jamesii), wood sorrel leaves, and yucca buds (unknown species). Other items include: honey from ground hives and hives found within agave, sotol, and narrowleaf yucca plants...
Other plants utilized by the Chiricahua include: agarita (or algerita) berries, alligator juniper berries, anglepod seeds, banana yucca (or datil, broadleaf yucca) fruit, chili peppers, chokecherries, cota (used for tea), currants, dropseed grass seeds, Gambel oak acorns, Gambel oak bark (used for tea), grass seeds (of various varieties), greens (of various varieties), hawthorne fruit, Lamb's-quarters leaves, lip ferns (used for tea), live oak acorns, locust blossoms, locust pods, maize kernels (used for tiswin), mesquite beans, mulberries, narrowleaf yucca blossoms, narrowleaf yucca stalks, nipple cactus fruit, one-seed juniper berries, onions, pigweed seeds, pinyon nuts, pitahaya fruit, prickly pear fruit, prickly pear juice, raspberries, screwbean (or tornillo) fruit, saguaro fruit, spurge seeds, strawberries, sumac (Rhus microcarpa) berries, sunflower seeds, tule rootstocks, tule shoots, pigweed tumbleweed seeds, unicorn plant seeds, walnuts, western yellow pine inner bark (used as a sweetener), western yellow pine nuts, whitestar potatoes (Ipomoea lacunosa), wild grapes, wild potatoes (Solanum jamesii), wood sorrel leaves, and yucca buds (unknown species). Other items include: honey from ground hives and hives found within agave, sotol, and narrowleaf yucca plants...
Medicine men (shamans) learn the ceremonies, which can also be acquired by direct revelation to the individual (see also mysticism). Different Apachean cultures had different views of ceremonial practice. Most Chiricahua and Mescalero ceremonies were learned through the transmission of personal religious visions, while the Jicarilla and Western Apache used standardized rituals as the more central ceremonial practice. Important standardized ceremonies include the puberty ceremony (Sunrise Dance) of young women, Navajo chants, Jicarilla "long-life" ceremonies, and Plains Apache "sacred-bundle" ceremonies... (Wikipedia)
(Wikipedia)
Golden Snow
“Ceremonies are very important part of the Native Spiritual Journey ... as a child many were held for each season of the year and to receive direct revelation for the start of a new life and the journey of a Spirit leaving this life beautiful ceremonies with great meaning ...thanks for sharing
29.01.2014 - Me Inc and Writers and Pantheists and 19th century etc.
dali48 and private tuition and writing books and cycling and photographing in Erkrath etc.
Interpretation of dali48
How do authors see themselves today: as a modern version of a "damned poet"? - As a "Me Inc" or "micro-business"? - Or as the idealized form of our Entertainment Companies? ... (ARTE, 15.10.2009)
Writers see themselves as such because they have always liked to read and write a lot. - For example they have come to writing by many fateful reverses or a difficult medical history, - lasting for years. Some also tried to connect what they had read to their own painful experiences, - and to heal in a literary process... (dali48)
The confessing "pantheist" (Claude Monet) couldn't and didn't want to be buried in blessed soil. His only "God" was nature, - and its image of his beloved garden... (Rhine Post, 14.10.2009)
Interpretation of dali48
A writer is a person who produces literature or nonfiction, such as novels, short stories, plays, screenplays, poetry, essays, articles, or other literary art. Skilled writers are able to use language to portray ideas and images...
A writer's output sometimes contributes to the cultural content of a society, and a society may value his or her work as art...
Broadly, a writer is anyone who writes, especially one who writes professionally. The term writer is customarily used as a synonym of author, although the latter term has a somewhat broader meaning...
Pantheism is the view that the Universe (or Nature) and "God" (or divinity) are identical (see Cosmological Principles, etc. - d.48). Pantheists thus do not believe in a personal, or anthropomorphic god. The word derives from the Greek (pan) meaning "all" and the Greek (theos) meaning "God". As such, pantheism denotes the idea that "God" is best seen as a process of relating to the Universe. The central ideas found in almost all pantheistic beliefs are the view of the Cosmos as an all-encompassing unity, reverence for the Cosmos, and recognition of the sacredness of the Universe and Nature...
There is no official universal symbol for all types of pantheism, but one symbol used by the World Pantheist Movement (WPM) is the spiral as seen in the curves of the nautilus shell, or in the spiral arms of a galaxy, showing the link between the cosmic physical and the biological...
He (J.T.) clarified the idea in a 1710 letter to Gottfried Leibniz when he referred to "the pantheistic opinion of those who believe in no other eternal being but the universe". However, many earlier writers, schools of philosophy, and religious movements expressed pantheistic ideas...
The early Taoism of Lao Zi and Zhuangzi is also sometimes considered pantheistic...
The first open revival was by Giordano Bruno (burned at the stake in 1600)...
Moses Mendelssohn helped to spread pantheism to many German thinkers in the late 18th and in the 19th century...
For a time during the 19th century pantheism was the theological viewpoint of many leading writers and philosophers, attracting figures such as William Wordsworth and Samuel Coleridge in Britain; Johann Gottlieb Fichte, Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling and Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel in Germany; Walt Whitman, Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau in the USA...
It persisted in eminent pantheists such as the novelist D. H. Lawrence, scientist Albert Einstein... Prominent atheist Richard Dawkins' The God Delusion gave Naturalistic Pantheism increased credibility among atheists by describing it sympathetically as...
In 2008, Albert Einstein's 1954 German letter in which he dismissed belief in a personal God was auctioned off for more than US$330,000. Einstein wrote...
Physicalism is a strong form of metaphysical naturalism. This position was held by John Toland, Ernst Haeckel, D.H. Lawrence and Paul Harrison. This version is represented today by the World Pantheist Movement founded by Harrison. In this version, the term god — if used at all — is basically a synonym for Nature or Universe, seen from the point of view of reverence...
Taoism in the tradition of its leading thinkers Lao Tzu and Zhuangzi, is comparable with Pantheism, as The Tao is always spoken of with profound religious reverence and respect, similar to the way that Pantheism discusses the "divinity" of the Universe...
This idea of pantheism is traceable from some of the more ancient Vedas and Upanishads to vishishtadvaita philosophy... (Wikipedia)