comparemela.com

Page 7 - சங்கமான் நதி News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Springfield s back yard

Diving boards at public beach house. Is there any other place that figures so centrally in the social, recreational and erotic life of so many Springfieldians from so many backgrounds? A summer evening with a fishing line in the water, listening to the waves lapping on the old dam steps. Watching the moon rise over the water with a lover. Paddling about in the backwaters, where muskrats had the right of way. Motoring around the lake roads with the windows down on a muggy night It is hard to imagine Springfield without its lake. It is even harder to imagine that Springfield actually built it. How it built it, and with what result, is the subject of a new photo history,

Michael Fuzzy deLisle is an unsung hero of the fertile 1970s Champaign-Urbana scene | The Secret History of Chicago Music

Michael ‘Fuzzy’ deLisle is an unsung hero of the fertile 1970s Champaign-Urbana scene  He’s released just one single in his long career, but he’s played a staggering amount of great country rock and folk. Sign up for our newsletters Subscribe Since 2004 Plastic Crimewave (aka Steve Krakow) has used the Secret History of Chicago Music to shine a light on worthy artists with Chicago ties who ve been forgotten, underrated, or never noticed in the first place. Historians, archaeologists, and treasure hunters tend to be obsessive people, but they don t expend all those hours of sweat and energy for just anything like anybody else, they ve got their specific interests, and you ve gotta dangle the right carrot to get them going. And the artist known formerly as Fuzzy checks at least three boxes on my list of requirements for a Secret History subject.

No-till practices in vulnerable areas reduce soil erosion

MORE URBANA, IL. – Soil erosion is a major challenge in agricultural production. It affects soil quality and carries nutrient sediments that pollute waterways. While soil erosion is a naturally occurring process, agricultural activities such as conventional tilling exacerbate it. Farmers implementing no-till practices can significantly reduce soil erosion rates, a new University of Illinois study shows. Completely shifting to no-till would reduce soil loss and sediment yield by more than 70%, says Sanghyun Lee, doctoral student in the Department of Agricultural and Biological Engineering at U of I and lead author on the study, published in Journal of Environmental Management.  But even a partial change in tilling practices could have significant results, he adds.

© 2025 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.