Wednesday, May 9, 2012

American Society of Civil Engineers - ASCE Top Sellers : Field Guide to Environmental Engineering for Development Workers : Water, Sanitation, and Indoor Air; James R. Mihelcic, Ph.D.; Lauren M. Fry; Elizabeth A. Myre; Linda D. Phillips, P.E.; Brian Barkdoll, Ph.D., P.E., 2009 / 564 pp., ISBN: 9780784409855 (Foreword by President Jimmy Carter)

Description 
Foreword by President Jimmy Carter

Throughout the world, and even in the United States, engineers are tackling the challenges of sustainable development and public health—challenges that engineers are uniquely qualified to address. Yet engineers working abroad on development projects often lack the knowledge and information to design, plan, construct, operate, and maintain technology that is culturally, economically, and geographically appropriate—technology that takes into account gender, does not use significant amounts of fossil fuels, accounts for environmental conditions like water scarcity, and uses local construction materials.

This readable and fully illustrated guide is a complete handbook for international engineering service projects that involve water supply and treatment, watersheds, sanitation systems, and indoor air quality. It provides the tools necessary to implement the right technology in developing regions around the world. The authors introduce sustainable engineering and explain how environmental engineering fosters public health, with an emphasis on the relationship between community participation and the success of an engineering project. In addition, this book covers topographical surveying, project planning, watershed management, and construction materials and techniques. Specific technical guidance is offered for the design and construction of multiple systems for water supply, water and wastewater treatment, and flood storage and drainage, as well as solid waste management and indoor air quality improvement.

This book is a valuable resource for engineering students, faculty, and practitioners involved with programs like Engineers without Borders, Water for People, and Engineers for a Sustainable World, as well as those affiliated with government groups, international agencies, and charitable organizations.

About the Authors
James R. Mihelcic, Ph.D., BCEEM, is a professor of civil and environmental engineering, a state of Florida 21st Century World Class Scholar, and director of the Master's International Program in Civil and Environmental Engineering at the University of South Florida.

Lauren M. Fry is a doctoral candidate in environmental engineering at Michigan Technological University.

Elizabeth A. Myre has managed water, sanitation, and renewable energy projects with NGOs in Haiti and Guatemala.

Linda D. Phillips, P.E., P.M.P, C.D.T., is a lecturer and Patel Associate in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and director of the International Capstone Design (ICD) program at the University of South Florida.

Brian Barkdoll, Ph.D., P.E., D.WRE, F.ASCE is an associate professor of civil and environmental engineering at Michigan Technological University.

Product Reviews

"... this book is nothing less than a how-to guide for applying engineering know-how to help people in the developing world gain access to clean water and achieve higher standards of sanitation.... The guide is densely packed with straightforward, practical, black-and-white sketches, many of them showing the construction and operation of various facets of infrastructure..." —Civil Engineering magazine.

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American Society of Civil Engineers - ASCE Top Sellers : Moray: Inca Engineering Mystery. Kenneth R. Wright, P.E., L.S.; Ruth M. Wright, J.D.; Alfredo Valencia Zegarra, Ph.D.; Gordon McEwan, Ph.D., 2011 / 228 pp., / ISBN: 9780784410790

Description

Halfway between Machu Picchu and the city of Cuzco, Peru, lies a civil engineering wonder that has captivated and puzzled researchers and travelers since it was first photographed in 1931. Situated on a plateau, the ancient Inca site of Moray consists of many terraced circular depressions in the earth, the largest of which is 30 meters (98 feet) deep. The difference in temperature between the top and the bottom of the circles can be as much as 15 °C (27 °F).

What are the mysterious concentric circles? What do they mean? Was this a religious site? An agricultural research station? Moray: Inca Engineering Mystery reports the results of an exhaustive investigation into the surveying work underlying the site’s construction, as well as the engineered systems for collecting and delivering water. Ken Wright and his team take the reader on a tour of Moray, describing the geography and geology of the area. They explain their field evidence that led to solving the Inca mystery and resolving decades of speculation.

The book includes a walking tour and map to guide visitors through Moray’s significant features.

Profusely illustrated and written in nontechnical language, Moray will appeal to civil engineers interested in earthworks, water supply systems, and engineering history, as well as the tourist and armchair traveler.

About the Authors

Kenneth R. Wright, P.E., L.S., is founder and chief engineer of Wright Water Engineers, Inc., a Denver consulting firm specializing in water resources and municipal utility design. He is author of Machu Picchu: A Civil Engineering Marvel (ASCE Press, 2000) and Tipon: Water Engineering Masterpiece of the Inca Empire (ASCE Press, 2006).

Ruth M. Wright, J.D., is co-author of the best selling The Machu Picchu Guidebookpublished in 2001 and revised in 2004. She is an award-winning photographer with photos appearing in numerous publications, including National Geographic Magazine. Her photo-essay Machu Picchu Revealed was published in 2008.

Alfredo Valencia Zegarra, Ph.D., was a professor at the Department of Anthropology and Archaeology at Cusco and a registered professional archaeologist with the Instituto Nacional de Cultura de Peru. He spent several years as the Machu Picchu resident archaeologist and was coauthor of The Machu Picchu Guidebook and Machu Picchu: A Civil Engineering Marvel.

Gordon McEwan, Ph.D., is a professor at Wagner College on Staten Island in New York. As an Andean scholar, he has led archaeological research projects in Peru over the course of 23 field seasons at Pikillacta and Chokepukio.

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American Society of Civil Engineers - ASCE Top Sellers : Minimum Design Loads for Buildings and Other Structures: ASCE/SEI 7-10 (Book - Standard No. 007-10), ISBN: 978-0-7844-1085-1, 2010, 608 pp., Paperback / (Book & CD Set) / ASCE/SEI 7-10, is a complete revision of ASCE Standard 7-05 / Structural Engineering Institute (SEI)

Minimum Design Loads for Buildings and Other Structures: ASCE/SEI 7-10 (Book)

ASCE/SEI 7-10, is a complete revision of ASCE Standard 7-05. ASCE 7-10 offers a complete update and reorganization of the wind load provisions, expanding them from one chapter into six to make them more understandable and easier to follow. ASCE 7-10 provides new ultimate event wind maps with corresponding reductions in load factors, so that the loads are not affected. It updates the seismic loads of ASCE 7-05, offering new risk-targeted seismic maps. The snow load, live load, and atmospheric icing provisions of ASCE 7-05 are all updated as well. ASCE Standard 7-10 provides requirements for general structural design and includes means for determining dead, live, soil, flood, wind, snow, rain, atmospheric ice, and earthquake loads, and their combinations that are suitable for inclusion in building codes and other documents. A detailed commentary containing explanatory and supplementary information to assist users of ASCE 7-10 is included with each chapter. ASCE 7-10 is an integral part of the building codes of the United States. Structural engineers, architects, and those engaged in preparing and administering local building codes will find the structural load requirements essential to their practice.

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