uncover$86750$ - traduzione in olandese
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In questa pagina puoi ottenere un'analisi dettagliata di una parola o frase, prodotta utilizzando la migliore tecnologia di intelligenza artificiale fino ad oggi:

  • come viene usata la parola
  • frequenza di utilizzo
  • è usato più spesso nel discorso orale o scritto
  • opzioni di traduzione delle parole
  • esempi di utilizzo (varie frasi con traduzione)
  • etimologia

uncover$86750$ - traduzione in olandese

REDIRECTION OF A STREAM INTO AN ABOVE-GROUND CHANNEL
Uncover a subterranean river; Uncover an underground river; Uncover a river; Daylighting (rivers); Uncover an underground stream; Uncover a subterranean stream; Deculverting; Daylighted creek
  • Hastings Creek Restored at Creekway Park, Vancouver, B.C.
  • After: Cheonggyecheon creek fully restored
  • A short stretch of Lower [[Marin Creek]] in [[UC Village]] in [[Albany, California]] has been daylighted.
  • After: East Credit Tributary stream restoration
  • Daylighted stream at Spanish Banks, Vancouver, B.C.
  • The daylighted [[Saw Mill River]] in [[Getty Square]], [[Yonkers, New York]], had been covered by a parking lot.
  • The historic stream network in Vancouver, B.C.

uncover      
v. ontdekken, blootstellen

Definizione

uncover
(uncovers, uncovering, uncovered)
1.
If you uncover something, especially something that has been kept secret, you discover or find out about it.
Auditors said they had uncovered evidence of fraud...
= discover
VERB: V n
2.
When people who are digging somewhere uncover something, they find a thing or a place that has been under the ground for a long time.
Archaeologists have uncovered an 11,700-year-old hunting camp in Alaska.
= unearth
VERB: V n
3.
To uncover something means to remove something that is covering it.
When the seedlings sprout, uncover the tray.
VERB: V n

Wikipedia

Daylighting (streams)

Daylighting can be defined as "opening up buried watercourses and restoring them to more natural conditions". An alternative definition refers to "the practice of removing streams from buried conditions and exposing them to the Earth's surface in order to directly or indirectly enhance the ecological, economic and/or socio-cultural well-being of a region and its inhabitants". The term is used to refer to the restoration of an originally open-air watercourse, which had at some point been diverted below ground, back into an above-ground channel. Typically, the rationale behind returning the riparian environment of a stream, wash, or river to a more natural state is to reduce runoff, create habitat for species in need of it, or improve an area's aesthetics. In the UK, the practice is also known as deculverting.

In addition to its use in urban design and planning the term also refers to the public process of advancing such projects. According to the Planning and Development Department of the City of Berkeley, "A general consensus has developed that protecting and restoring natural creeks' functions is achievable over time in an urban environment while recognizing the importance of property rights."