By: Elizabeth Gordon-Mills, PhD The true nature of our environment is one of constant change and flux. It is dynamic, and there is no such thing as stability. Human beings have tried to make the environment more stable by technology and in doing so we have created the false expectation that things will always be the same as we have come to expect. The debate over the issue of letting seawater into the Lower Lakes as a means of preventing the further development of acid sulphate soils has degraded into a fight between the two opposing sides: those against and those for. Please read the arguments against seawater and the arguments for seawater. Some of these arguments raised by both sides are outlined and discussed below: |
The Debate
Subpages (12):
Against
Bioremediation
Engineering aspects of seawater in the Lakes
For
Nature of our Environment
Past History of the Lakes
Ramsar Convention on Wetlands obligations
Releasing more water from upstream
Reliance on indigenous knowledge
The problem of evaporation from the surface of the Lakes
The problems of a dry Lake bed
The Weirs