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  2. Ancient Hawaiian aquaculture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Hawaiian_aquaculture

    Ancient Hawaiian aquaculture. Before contact with Europeans, the Hawaiian people practiced aquaculture through development of fish ponds (Hawaiian: loko iʻa), the most advanced fish-husbandry among the original peoples of the Pacific. While other cultures in places like Egypt and China also used the practice, Hawaii's aquaculture was very ...

  3. Heʻeia Fishpond - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heʻeia_Fishpond

    January 17, 1973. Heʻeia Fishpond (Hawaiian: Loko Iʻa O Heʻeia) is an ancient Hawaiian fishpond located at Heʻeia on the island of Oahu in Hawaii. A walled coastal pond (loko iʻa kuapā), it is the only Hawaiian fishpond fully encircled by a wall (kuapā). Constructed sometime between the early 1200s and early 1400s, it was badly damaged ...

  4. Sugar plantations in Hawaii - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sugar_plantations_in_Hawaii

    The Old Sugar Mill, established in 1835 by Ladd & Co., is the site of the first sugar plantation. In 1836 the first 8,000 pounds (3,600 kg) of sugar and molasses was shipped to the United States. [1] The plantation town of Koloa, was established adjacent to the mill. By the 1840s sugarcane plantations gained a foothold in Hawaiian agriculture.

  5. Red Hill water crisis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Hill_water_crisis

    The Red Hill water crisis is a public health crisis and environmental disaster caused by fuel leaking from the Red Hill Underground Fuel Storage Facility into the freshwater aquifer underneath the island of Oʻahu. [1] Residents in military housing in and around Joint Base Pearl Harbor–Hickam began reporting chemical contamination in their ...

  6. Hawaii water resource region - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hawaii_Water_Resource_Region

    The Hawaii water resource region is one of 21 major geographic areas, or regions, in the first level of classification used by the United States Geological Survey to divide and sub-divide the United States into successively smaller hydrologic units. These geographic areas contain either the drainage area of a major river, or the combined ...

  7. Rainwater harvesting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rainwater_harvesting

    Rainwater capture and storage system, Mexico City campus, Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education Cistern, Mission District, San Francisco, California Rainwater capture, Gibraltar East Side, 1992 Home, with rain collection jars on roof, Panarea, Aeolian Islands, north of Sicily, Italy [7] Rainwater harvesting and hand washing system for a toilet in Kenya.