karst reservoir - определение. Что такое karst reservoir
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Что (кто) такое karst reservoir - определение

TOPOGRAPHY FORMED FROM THE DISSOLUTION OF SOLUBLE ROCKS
Karstic; Tsingy; Karstology; Karsts; Karst landscape; Limestone peak; Karst geography; Karst features; Karst feature; Karst Topography; Grast; Karst river; Karstification; Pseudokarst; Karst Landscape; Gypsum karst; Fluviokarst; Dolomite karst; Merokarst; Karst valley; Karst topography; Karst topology; Karstologist; Karstified; Kegelkarst; Karst landscapes; Karst morphology; Karst landforms; Karst relief; Karstic relief; Karst forest; Interstratal karst; Paleokarst; Palaeokarst; Palaeokarstic; Paleokarstic; Limestone karst
  • Global distribution of major outcrops of carbonate rocks (mainly [[limestone]], except [[evaporite]]s)
  • Lozère, France]]
  • Features typical of well-developed karst terrain
  • Sinj, Croatia]]
  • Karst formation of the [[Serra de Tramuntana]]
  • [[Rubaksa]] [[tufa]] plug in Ethiopia
  • [[Škocjan Caves]], [[Slovenia]]
  • A [[karst spring]] in the [[Jura mountains]] near [[Ouhans]] in eastern France at the source of the river [[Loue]]
  • Lunan Stone Forest]], [[Yunnan]], China

Natural reservoir         
  • [[Bushmeat]] being prepared for cooking in [[Ghana]], 2013. Human consumption of animals as bushmeat in equatorial Africa has caused the transmission of diseases, including [[Ebola]], to people.<ref>[https://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/health-and-families/health-news/african-monkey-meat-that-could-be-behind-the-next-hiv-7786152.html 25 people in Bakaklion, Cameroon killed due to eating of ape]</ref>
A LIVING HOST, SUCH AS AN ANIMAL OR A PLANT, INSIDE OF WHICH AN INFECTIOUS PATHOGEN NATURALLY LIVES AND REPRODUCES
Natural host; Infection reservoir; Natural reservoirs; Reservoir of infection; Reservoir host; Reservoir species; Animal reservoir; Reservoir (epidemiology)
In infectious disease ecology and epidemiology, a natural reservoir, also known as a disease reservoir or a reservoir of infection, is the population of organisms or the specific environment in which an infectious pathogen naturally lives and reproduces, or upon which the pathogen primarily depends for its survival. A reservoir is usually a living host of a certain species, such as an animal or a plant, inside of which a pathogen survives, often (though not always) without causing disease for the reservoir itself.
reservoir         
  • [[Bankstown Reservoir]] in Sydney.
  • Brushes Clough Reservoir, located above [[Shaw and Crompton]], England.
  • Water level marker in a reservoir
  • [[Gibson Reservoir]], Montana
  • A [[Great cormorant]] (''Phalacrocorax carbo'') perched on a buoy at [[Farmoor Reservoir]], [[Oxfordshire]]. As reservoirs may contain stocks of fish, numerous water-bird species may rely on reservoirs and form habitats near them.
  • Hydroelectric dam in cross section.
  • Recreational-only Kupferbach reservoir near [[Aachen]]/Germany.
  • [[Lake Kariba]] from space.
  • Vyrnwy Valley]] and was the first large stone dam built in the United Kingdom.
  • [[Liptovská Mara]] in [[Slovakia]] (built in 1975) – an example of an artificial lake which significantly changed the local microclimate.
  • Spillway of [[Llyn Brianne]] dam in [[Wales]].
  • The [[Queen Mother Reservoir]] in [[Berkshire]], [[England]] is an example of a bank-side reservoir; its water is pumped from the [[River Thames]].
  • [[Natural Resources Wales]] time-lapse video of the strengthening of the embankment of a small reservoir in [[Gwydir Forest]], [[Wales]].
  • Lake Osceola]] on campus of the [[University of Miami]] in [[Coral Gables, Florida]], May 2006
ARTIFICIAL LAKE IMPOUNDED USING A DAM OR LOCK TO STORE WATER
Artificial lake; Réservoir; Bankside reservoir; Reservoirs; Man-made lake; Artificial lakes; Bankside reservoirs; Reservoir lake; Headpond; Resevoir; Dam reservoir; Water reservoir; Reservoir (water); Man made lake; Manmade lake; Multipurpose reservoir; Storage reservoir; Reservoir dam; Full pool; Artificial Lake; Artificial loch; Service reservoir; Storage pond; Artificial pond; Reservoir Complex; Greenhouse gas emissions from reservoirs; Dam lake; Impounded lake; Impact of climate change on reservoirs; Methane emissions from reservoirs
(reservoirs)
1.
A reservoir is a lake that is used for storing water before it is supplied to people.
N-COUNT
2.
A reservoir of something is a large quantity of it that is available for use when needed.
...the huge oil reservoir beneath the Kuwaiti desert.
N-COUNT: with supp, oft N of n, adj N
reservoir         
  • [[Bankstown Reservoir]] in Sydney.
  • Brushes Clough Reservoir, located above [[Shaw and Crompton]], England.
  • Water level marker in a reservoir
  • [[Gibson Reservoir]], Montana
  • A [[Great cormorant]] (''Phalacrocorax carbo'') perched on a buoy at [[Farmoor Reservoir]], [[Oxfordshire]]. As reservoirs may contain stocks of fish, numerous water-bird species may rely on reservoirs and form habitats near them.
  • Hydroelectric dam in cross section.
  • Recreational-only Kupferbach reservoir near [[Aachen]]/Germany.
  • [[Lake Kariba]] from space.
  • Vyrnwy Valley]] and was the first large stone dam built in the United Kingdom.
  • [[Liptovská Mara]] in [[Slovakia]] (built in 1975) – an example of an artificial lake which significantly changed the local microclimate.
  • Spillway of [[Llyn Brianne]] dam in [[Wales]].
  • The [[Queen Mother Reservoir]] in [[Berkshire]], [[England]] is an example of a bank-side reservoir; its water is pumped from the [[River Thames]].
  • [[Natural Resources Wales]] time-lapse video of the strengthening of the embankment of a small reservoir in [[Gwydir Forest]], [[Wales]].
  • Lake Osceola]] on campus of the [[University of Miami]] in [[Coral Gables, Florida]], May 2006
ARTIFICIAL LAKE IMPOUNDED USING A DAM OR LOCK TO STORE WATER
Artificial lake; Réservoir; Bankside reservoir; Reservoirs; Man-made lake; Artificial lakes; Bankside reservoirs; Reservoir lake; Headpond; Resevoir; Dam reservoir; Water reservoir; Reservoir (water); Man made lake; Manmade lake; Multipurpose reservoir; Storage reservoir; Reservoir dam; Full pool; Artificial Lake; Artificial loch; Service reservoir; Storage pond; Artificial pond; Reservoir Complex; Greenhouse gas emissions from reservoirs; Dam lake; Impounded lake; Impact of climate change on reservoirs; Methane emissions from reservoirs
n. an artificial; natural reservoir

Википедия

Karst

Karst is a topography formed from the dissolution of soluble rocks such as limestone, dolomite, and gypsum. It is characterized by underground drainage systems with sinkholes and caves. It has also been documented for more weathering-resistant rocks, such as quartzite, given the right conditions. Subterranean drainage may limit surface water, with few to no rivers or lakes. However, in regions where the dissolved bedrock is covered (perhaps by debris) or confined by one or more superimposed non-soluble rock strata, distinctive karst features may occur only at subsurface levels and can be totally missing above ground.

The study of paleokarst (buried karst in the stratigraphic column) is important in petroleum geology because as much as 50% of the world's hydrocarbon reserves are hosted in carbonate rock, and much of this is found in porous karst systems.