Of the estimated 76 000 farm dams in the wheatbelt, about 8 per cent either leak or are salt affected. The remaining 70 000 dams are capable of holding water for livestock use and can be regarded as sercicable dams. A great many of the serviceable dams are unreliable water supplies due to the combined effects of lack of runoff from catchments, shallow depth of storage and small size of storage in relation to expected demand from livestock and evaporation loss
TOWARDS the end of summer (and especially in a drought) the risk of water in dams, soaks, wells or t...
A throughflow leak in this dam provides a reservoir to keep the salt seep (indicated) active behind ...
Article discusses the Stirling Dam, the main water store for the Harvey irrigation area with its red...
Department of Agriculture surveys have shown that many farms in Western australia\u27s northern whea...
MANY new farm dams are sunk each year in the wheatbelt and much money is spent on them. With continu...
In good rainfall years, farm dams provide water fo more than 50 per cent of the total stock in the w...
Leakage is not a major cause of failure of farm dams in the Western Australian wheatbelt, but it is ...
Unreliable water supplies have plagued the Western Australian wheatbelt farms since settlement. The ...
Western Australia\u27s Upper and Lower Great Southern statistical areas include most of the broad-sc...
WATER storage is essential on most south-west farms to ensure adequate irrigation supplies in the dr...
Runoff and reservoir waters from the Pierre Shale Plains in southeastern Montana were fresh (< 1,000...
The amounts and frequency of runoff from unimproved farmland catchments in Western Australia\u27s ce...
For many years, Western Australia\u27s north-eastern wheatbelthas suffered chronic shortages of wate...
Design is usually concerned with getting adequate return from limited recources. Farm dams which dry...
Design is usually concerned with getting adequate return from limited recources. Farm dams which dry...
TOWARDS the end of summer (and especially in a drought) the risk of water in dams, soaks, wells or t...
A throughflow leak in this dam provides a reservoir to keep the salt seep (indicated) active behind ...
Article discusses the Stirling Dam, the main water store for the Harvey irrigation area with its red...
Department of Agriculture surveys have shown that many farms in Western australia\u27s northern whea...
MANY new farm dams are sunk each year in the wheatbelt and much money is spent on them. With continu...
In good rainfall years, farm dams provide water fo more than 50 per cent of the total stock in the w...
Leakage is not a major cause of failure of farm dams in the Western Australian wheatbelt, but it is ...
Unreliable water supplies have plagued the Western Australian wheatbelt farms since settlement. The ...
Western Australia\u27s Upper and Lower Great Southern statistical areas include most of the broad-sc...
WATER storage is essential on most south-west farms to ensure adequate irrigation supplies in the dr...
Runoff and reservoir waters from the Pierre Shale Plains in southeastern Montana were fresh (< 1,000...
The amounts and frequency of runoff from unimproved farmland catchments in Western Australia\u27s ce...
For many years, Western Australia\u27s north-eastern wheatbelthas suffered chronic shortages of wate...
Design is usually concerned with getting adequate return from limited recources. Farm dams which dry...
Design is usually concerned with getting adequate return from limited recources. Farm dams which dry...
TOWARDS the end of summer (and especially in a drought) the risk of water in dams, soaks, wells or t...
A throughflow leak in this dam provides a reservoir to keep the salt seep (indicated) active behind ...
Article discusses the Stirling Dam, the main water store for the Harvey irrigation area with its red...