When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Bioregionalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bioregionalism

    The Kansas Area Watershed, "KAW" was founded in 1982 and has been meeting regularly since that time. [68] KAW holds a yearly meeting, usually in the spring. The government of the Canadian province of Alberta created the "land-use framework regions" in 2007 roughly corresponding to each major river basin within the province.

  3. Watershed area (medical) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Watershed_area_(medical)

    Watershed area is the medical term referring to regions of the body, [1] that receive dual blood supply from the most distal branches of two large arteries, such as the splenic flexure of the large intestine. The term refers metaphorically to a geological watershed, or drainage divide, which separates adjacent drainage basins. For example, the ...

  4. Watershed stroke - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Watershed_stroke

    Watershed stroke symptoms are due to the reduced blood flow to all parts of the body, specifically the brain, thus leading to brain damage. Initial symptoms, as promoted by the American Stroke Association, are FAST, representing F = Facial weakness (droop), A = Arm weakness (drift), S = Speech difficulty (slur), and T = Time to act (priority of intervention).

  5. Cascadia (bioregion) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cascadia_(bioregion)

    The name "Cascadia" was first applied to the whole geologic region by Bates McKee in his 1972 geology textbook Cascadia; the geologic evolution of the Pacific Northwest. Later the name was adopted by David McCloskey, a Seattle University sociology professor, to describe it as a bioregion. McCloskey describes Cascadia as "a land of falling waters."

  6. Bioregion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bioregion

    Bioregions became a foundational concept within the philosophical system called Bioregionalism.A key difference between an ecoregions and biogeography and the term bioregion, is that while ecoregions are based on general biophysical and ecosystem data, human settlement and cultural patterns play a key role for how a bioregion is defined.

  7. Hydrologic unit system (United States) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrologic_unit_system...

    As first implemented the system had 21 regions, 221 subregions, 378 accounting units, and 2,264 cataloging units. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Over time the system was changed and expanded. [ 3 ] As of 2010 there are six levels in the hierarchy, represented by hydrologic unit codes from 2 to 12 digits long, called regions , subregions, basins , subbasins ...

  8. Watershed management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Watershed_management

    Watershed management is the study of the relevant characteristics of a watershed aimed at the sustainable distribution of its resources and the process of creating and implementing plans, programs and projects to sustain and enhance watershed functions that affect the plant, animal, and human communities within the watershed boundary. [1]

  9. Ecoregion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecoregion

    An ecoregion (ecological region) is an ecologically and geographically defined area that is smaller than a bioregion, which in turn is smaller than a biogeographic realm. Ecoregions cover relatively large areas of land or water, and contain characteristic, geographically distinct assemblages of natural communities and species .