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Clara Bowman is like most society women recently turned 18 in New York in the early days of the Gilded Age. Until the man everyone expects her to marry dies in a train accident in Queens n May 1872. Her ordered life turns to shambles until she discovers an artist painting roses in a corner of London's Regent's Park and who ignites in Clara a passion to recover through sketches and portraits and landscapes, freed of the expectations of others and freed to be herself.It will take time, work, and disappointments and obstacles for Miss Clara Bowman. This is the story about her breaking free from her family's and society's expectations. It is not an easy journey, though she eventually obtains her family's support, and she encounters real and emotional pain again and again, but this story, set in the early days of the Gilded Age, is about a woman's fulfillment.This novel is related to, but is not a sequel to, Róisín Campbell, published in 2020. Many characters in that book appear here and some of their stories after the end of that book are revealed here. This is, however, a separate story. That of Clara Bowman.
Water is an increasingly critical issue at the forefront of global policy change, management and planning. There are growing concerns about water as a renewable resource, its availability for a wide range of users, aquatic ecosystem health, and global issues relating to climate change, water security, water trading and water ethics. This handbook provides the most comprehensive reference ever published on water resource issues. It brings together multiple disciplines to understand and help resolve problems of water quality and scarcity from a global perspective. Its case studies and 'foundation' chapters will be greatly valued by students, researchers and professionals involved in water resources, hydrology, governance and public policy, law, economics, geography and environmental studies.
Water is essential to life for humans and their food crops, and for ecosystems. Effective water management requires tracking the inflow, outflow, quantity and quality of ground-water and surface water, much like balancing a bank account. Currently, networks of ground-based instruments measure these in individual locations, while airborne and satellite sensors measure them over larger areas. Recent technological innovations offer unprecedented possibilities to integrate space, air, and land observations to advance water science and guide management decisions. This book concludes that in order to realize the potential of integrated data, agencies, universities, and the private sector must work together to develop new kinds of sensors, test them in field studies, and help users to apply this information to real problems.
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Short stories of the unusual, the impossible, flights of fantasy, meant to entertain
These probate inventories of the city and Deanery of Bristol are held by the Bristol Record Office. Some inventories extend into the area of Abbots Leigh in Somerset.