User:Davetoo/draft/evap
Reservoir/Evaporator | |
---|---|
Proposal status: | Obsoleted (inactive) |
Proposed by: | Davetoo |
Tagging: | reservoir_type=evaporator |
Applies to: | area |
Definition: | For the natural evaporation of water to allow harvesting of
mineral concentrates |
Statistics: |
|
Rendered as: | TODO |
Draft started: | 2009-08-05 |
(note: #Formatting_notes explains the unconventional order of the following sections.)
Restrictions
Meaningful only in combination with landuse=reservoir.
Additional tagging/subtypes
- precipitate=*, e.g. precipitate=NaCl_salt (Table salt is but one of a huge class of salts, y'know)
Related features/examples thereof
- reservoir_type=cooling: For cooling industrial waste water, e.g. nuclear power plant coolant
- reservoir_type=sewage: For the treatment of domestic water-born waste
- reservoir_type=filtration:
- reservoir_type=tailings: Ore and waste materials discarded in ore-treatment and mining processes, in water
- reservoir_type=water_storage: The "traditional" use of the word.
Summary
We propose replacing the recent landuse=salt_pond with a second-level subtype of landuse=reservoir, i.e:
landuse=reservoir; reservoir_type=evaporator; precipitate=NaCl_salt
Rationale
While NaCl salt evaporators are of ancient origin and by far the most prevalent, many use-cases would benefit from a heirarchy of different types of the common ancestor class "reservoir". Designing this heirarchy early-on will make the renderers more scalable/maintainable.
Tactically, closer alignment with the US National Hydrography Dataset (NHD) schema will make the imported data more precise and useful; the USGS/NHD heirarchy is also eminently sensible for mapping (and scientific) purposes.
Mineral evaporators and chemical settling ponds are key features of many EPA Superfund cleanup site projects.
Examples
Rendering
TODO: images from PD sources (USGS map standards).
References
- Standards for National Hydrography Dataset - High Resolution -- describes the feature heirarchy used in the NHD, definitions of these features, and the criteria the USGS uses to determine which features/characteristics to capture and map.
- Part 5: Publication Symbols, Standards for 1:24,000- and 1:25,000-Scale Quadrangle Maps, and Part 6: Publication Symbols.... -- how USGS map features are rendered and printed.
As US Gov't publications, all three of the above are available for image snarfing to help create renderings.
Deprecates
Formatting notes
I have formatted this proposal somewhat differently than the norm, in something of an "upside-down" order. I've put what I think are the most important technical facts first, to more objectively describe the facts of the poroposal.