
This month’s newsletter explore various dams with mine tailings, as well as what happens when these dams fail. A third-year undergrad project on the Fitz Waterwheel Company and some job opportunities are also included.
This month’s newsletter looks at the woefully neglected area of algal ponds in which various types of algae can be grown for food, as a basis for cosmetics, for fish food and for wastewater treatment. There are also details of a new grant we will be working on, an update …
Water, that most ubiquitous of materials, behaves in strange ways. This month’s newsletter first examines the Hydrostatic Paradoxon with an interesting example using mountains and climate change. Read on about the relationship between the little-known Du Buat’s Paradoxon and broken tidal turbine blades. And finally, there is much more on …
UK flooding is at the forefront of the news and flooded houses are left with a layer of sediment when the floodwaters recede. This month’s newsletter looks at China’s Yellow River, named because of its colour, due to the huge amount of fine sediment it carries – around 4.38 million …
This month’s newsletter welcomes the new decade by looking back through time at water in defence and how Dutch engineers took the principle of the moat to whole new levels of complexity, advancing the science of hydraulic engineering at the same time. Features also include pressure measurement with lasers, the …
This newsletter includes jobs in water engineering, opportunities for year 3 individual projects, as well as exploring water stress in Peru and outlining some work we propose to do with the University of Engineering and Technology in Peshawar to explore the generation of electricity from hydropower in irrigation systems. If, …
If you ever wanted to know the relationship between goats and erosion, then read our Nov 19 newsletter. Also, job and PhD opportunities, and details of a year 3 project on the methane-based biorefinery.
The February 2019 newsletter is a continuation of the mini-series on lithium mining in the Atacama Desert. Our new Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) system is outlined and Oana Iliescu’s 3rd year project on food waste is outlined.
This month’s newsletter explore various dams with mine tailings, as well as what happens when these dams fail. A third-year undergrad project on the Fitz Waterwheel Company and some job opportunities are also included.
Our December Newsletter, featuring stories on tidal energy and current progress of 3rd Year Individual Projects, is available here.
This month’s newsletter includes overviews of some of the work we do with anaerobic digesters, as well as 3rd and 4th year undergrad projects. Read the newsletter here and see previous editions here.