Here are some thought that may be helpful, Andrew.

How about first editing the webpage at
http://wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrology
Start a new sub branch called hydrological geoengineering
referring to the page at
http://wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrological_Geoengineering

Then, on the latter page, include some geoengineering projects that
have been discussed for years, when the term geoengineering wasn't as
closely associated with global warming as it is today. Geoengineering
projects in the past included engineering projects that spanned entire
continents, such as the following three proposals to engineer rain in
Australia, the dry continent:

- In 1998, John West came up with the idea of a 2,300km canal to split
Australia in two, from Darwin in the north to the Spencer Gulf in
South Australia. The canal would allow ships to access the center of
Australia and provide water for irrigation by means of desalination
plants. Much water would evaporate inland from the canal and
contribute to clouds and rain.

- Lawrence James Hogan described in his book "Man-made mountain", 1979
(ISBN: 0959557105) the idea to construct a mountain range, 2000km
long, 10km wide at the base, 4 km tall and with a 2km plateau at the
top, from the south of Australia to the Timor Sea in the north. The
idea was that this could create rain in the dry interior of Australia,
starting rivers that could fertilize large tracts of land.

- Proposals to pipe or channel seawater into Lake Eyre were made as
far back as 1883. Lake Eyre is a usually dry lake which at its lowest
point is 15 meter below sea-level. Flooding Lake Eyre could create
clouds and rain for inland Australia, which could similarly turn
desert into fertile land.

The above projects could be regarded as hydraulic or hydrological
geoengineering projects because of their scale and they all date back
more than a decade.

You could also mention projects in China. For years there have also
been fears in India that China would start diverting water from the
Yarlung Zangbo River (upper reaches of the Brahmaputra) in the
Himalaya to the north of China. Two years ago, China's Water Resources
Minister Wang Shucheng, a hydraulic engineer, denied that there were
such plans, but the fears continue in India and Bangladesh.

Because such plans affect huge amounts of people and span huge amount
of land, they are sometimes described as geoengineering projects.
Similarly, the Three Gorges Dam, constructed along the Yangtze river,
is - because of its huge scale - sometimes described as a hydrological
geoengineering project.

In 2003, the Chinese government announced plans for a $60-billion
scheme to divert water from a tributary of the River Yangtze
northwards from three different locations, partly using the old Grand
Canal, which was built in imperial times to transport goods. Earlier
this month, New Scientist reported that the completion date for the
has been postponed and that the project is now in doubt. The eastern
route, using the ancient Grand Canal, is held up because factories are
polluting the canal. The western route, tapping the Yangtze headwaters
in Tibet, has not been started. Officials also blame pollution for the
latest delay to the middle route - a canal stretching more than 1200
kilometres from the Danjiangkou reservoir on the River Han.

Anyway, you could include such above projects on the page at
http://wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrological_Geoengineering
Then, you could mention a sub branch on that page called
arctic hydrological geoengineering

Cheers!
Sam Carana


On Dec 30, 10:11 pm, "Andrew Lockley" <[email protected]>
wrote:
> Wikipedia is going to DELETE the hydrological geoengineering article
> as they say that the name is not found outside wikipedia (well
> spotted, I made it up).  To stop this, I need to know what the PROPER
> term (used in the literature) for such projects are.  In the meantime,
> I will probably have to move all the content onto the main geoeng page
> to preserve it - sorry if it then loos a bit cluttered.
>
> A
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