M B Beck
Warnell School of Forest Resources, University of Georgia,
Athens, Georgia 30602-2152, USA
Abstract
For the most part investments in restricting the propagation
of pollutants have focused on managing a steady, invariant,
average condition of the aquatic environment. In this there
has been success. But the activities of society, in all its
forms of land use (urban, agricultural, and silvicultural),
have presumably still the capacity to generate as much potential
contamination of the environment as previously. It is simply
that we have now placed effective barriers - our wastewater
control infrastructures - between these activities of society
and the surrounding environment. And just as there would be
a concern for the long-term reliability of a dam structure for
a water reservoir, so there must now be an increasing concern
for the reliability of our wastewater control infrastructures.
Such concern is generic: transient perturbations about an equilibrium
are as relevant to agricultural and silvicultural control infrastructures
as they are to our systems of urban sewerage and wastewater
treatment. The paper assembles the diverse features of transient
pollution events, their monitoring, modeling and criteria for
management, in order to make a start on providing a more coherent
framework for their analysis. The notion of the frequency spectrum
of system perturbations is used for this purpose. In this, succinctness
is achieved, so that a better appreciation of the relationships
between long-term trends and high-frequency disturbances can
be obtained. In particular, the problems of managing transient
pollution events can be seen loosely against the backdrop of
a projects life cycle, in a manner that illuminates a
tension in our attitudes towards the passive and active paradigms
of operating the control structures that protect the environment
from pollution.
Water Science & Technology, 33(2), pp. 1-15 (1996).
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