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English
CRC Press Inc
27 October 1993
Wastewater Organisms contains 210 high-quality full-color micrographs to help you identify organisms found in sewage and sludge. These photos provide the maximum level of detail and will help you better understand the form and dimension of the organisms. Subjects depicted in the micrographs include bacteria, eggs, amoeba, parasitic protozoa, tardigrada (water bears), rotifers, ciliates, parasitic helminths, pollen grain, free-living nematodes, algae, flagellates, and more. There is a chapter on enumeration which provides literature and techniques for fixing and staining, techniques often required for identification to the species level. The book also contains a valuable glossary and index to make the book even easier to use. Wastewater Organisms is an indispensable reference for wastewater managers and supervisors, wastewater operators, environmental consultants, practicing engineers, regulatory agency personnel at all levels of government, and libraries.
By:   , , ,
Imprint:   CRC Press Inc
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 276mm,  Width: 219mm,  Spine: 15mm
Weight:   90g
ISBN:   9780873716239
ISBN 10:   087371623X
Pages:   94
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Treatment Processes and Organisms. Observation and Enumeration of Organisms. Photographs and Captions for Organisms.

Berk, Sharon G.

Reviews for Wastewater Organisms A Color Atlas

The second installment of Card's Tales of Alvin Maker (Seventh Son, 1987), about an alternate frontier America where folk magic works (people have knacks ), Red men are still very much in evidence, and numerous colonies exist alongside a fledgling US. The Red men are in tune ( green music ) with the land in a way that the Whites are not; their leaders are brothers and at odds. Tenskwa-Tawa (the Red Prophet of the title), powerful in magic, sees visions of a crystal city built by Reds - and urges that his people withdraw across the Mizippy river to the west. His brother Ta-Kumsaw advocates armed resistance (using only traditional Red, stone weapons) to the guns-and-whiskey-bearing Whiles (the latter includes, for some reason, Napoleon Bonaparte). Young Alvin and his brother Measure are captured by Ta-Kumsaw, and figure prominently in both the Red brothers' plans. The Red Prophet shows Alvin his crystal vision, and predicts that Ta-Kumsaw will not be killed so long as Alvin accompanies him. Matters culminate in a ghastly slaughter of innocent, unresisting Reds by deluded Whites. A deeply felt and intricately wrought effort, with the intensity often at a crackling pitch. Yet the focus has slipped away from Alvin, the intrusion of Napoleon is wholly gratuitous, and the heavyweight cosmic complications don't help. Impressive, once again, but less immediately involving than Vol. I. (Kirkus Reviews)


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