Guide to Further Reading
Guide to Further Reading This short list of books is not intended to be fully comprehensive, but aims to assist the reader in finding his way to a number of recent works, neither cited in the text nor specifically restricted to Britain, which contain abundant references to more specialised systematic fields. BRUCE, J. P., and CLARK, R. H. (1966). Introduction to Hydrometeorology, Pergamon, Oxford. CmLDs, E. C. (1969). Introduction to the Physical Basis of Soil Water Phenomena, Wiley, Chichester and New York. DAVIES, D. (1967). Fresh Water, Aldus Books, London. DE WIEST, R. J. M. (1965). Geohydrology, Wiley, New York. OVERMAN, M. (1968). Water, Aldus Books, London. PENMAN, H. L. (1963). Vegetation and Hydrology, Commonwealth Agri- cultural Bureaux, Farnham Royal. RAIKES, R. (1967). Water, Weather and Prehistory, Baker, London. TODD, D. K. (1959). Groundwater Hydrology, Wiley, New York. TwEEDm, A. D. (1966). Water and the World, Nelson, Melbourne. WIESNER, C. J. (1970). Hydrometeorology, Chapman and Hall, London. WISLER, C. 0., and BRATER, E. F. (1959). Hydrology, Wiley, New York. 218 References 1. The Global Context BARRY, R. G. (1969). The world hydrological cycle, Water, Earth and Man, (ed. R. J. Chorley), Methuen, London. BENTON, G. S., BLACKBURN, R. T., and SNEAD, V. O. (1950). The role of the atmosphere in the hydrologic cycle. Trans. Am. geophys. Un., 31, 61-73. CHORLEY, R. J., and KATES, R. W. (1969). Introduction, in Water, Earth and Man, (ed. R. J. Chorley), Methuen, London. ISAAC, P. C. G. (1965). Water, waste and wealth. An inaugural lecture, University of Newcastle-on-Tyne. LEOPOLD, L. B., and DAVIS, K.
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