A Case Study Assessment of Agroforestry: The Panama Canal Watershed

Author(s):  
Robert D. Hauff
Keyword(s):  
2013 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. ASWR.S12306 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexis Mojica ◽  
Irving Díaz ◽  
Carlos A. Ho ◽  
Fred Ogden ◽  
Reinhardt Pinzón ◽  
...  

The present investigation was focused on the variations in rainwater infiltration experienced by soils of Gamboa zone (Panama Canal Watershed) during various seasons of the year, employing a time-lapse analysis of electrical resistivity tomography (ERT). In 2009, a total of 3 geoelectrical tests were undertaken during the dry, transition and rainy seasons across a profile 47 m in length, strategically distributed on site. The results obtained in this study showed strong variations in calculated resistivity between these seasons, taking the dry season as a reference with decreases and increases of percent difference of resistivity between -20% and -100%, and between 50% and 100%, respectively. These decreases, when displayed through a sequence of time-lapse images, reveal a superficial extension of the water content variations along the entire profile, as well as strong inversion artifacts showing false increases of calculated electrical resistivity. Decreases are the product of the rainfall increase obtained in this type of tropical environment; permanent conductive anomalies in 3 tests are associated with the streams close to the study site. The results of this work were compared with a simulation resulting from a series of bidimensional models applied to the 3 studies evaluated: dry, transition and rainy seasons.


2021 ◽  
pp. 83-108
Author(s):  
James Michael Yeoman

This chapter presents a case study of grassroots networks between the Spanish anarchist movement and migrant laborers working on the construction of the Panama Canal (1904-1914). Sources provided by the anarchist press of both areas reveal sustained material and ideological exchange across the Atlantic in these years, with print materials, remittances, solidarity campaigns and public debates binding radical workers in a new and challenging context to the one they had left behind. Sites of global industrial capital, such as the Canal Zone, are thus revealed to form a central locale in the conception and functioning of an alternative, radical geography in the early twentieth century, marked by the horizontal connections sustained by the publishers, contributors and readers of anarchist print.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bradford S. Gentry ◽  
Quint Newcomer ◽  
Shimon C. Anisfeld ◽  
Michael A. Fotos

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