Alan MacDonald, H.C. Bonsor, Kazi Matin Ahmed, W. G. Burgess et al.
H.C. Bonsor, Alan MacDonald, Kazi Matin Ahmed, W. G. Burgess et al.
The Indo-Gangetic aquifer is one of the world's most important transboundary water resources, and the most heavily exploited aquifer in the world. To better understand the aquifer system, typologies have been characterized for the aquifer, which integrate existing datasets across the Indo-Gangetic c...
Alan MacDonald, H.C. Bonsor, Bill Taylor, M. Shamsudduha et al.
Groundwater within the Indo‐Gangetic Basin (IGB) alluvial aquifer system forms one of the world’s most important and heavily exploited reservoirs of freshwater. In this study we have examined the groundwater system through the lens of its resilience to change – both from the impact of climate cha...
Alan MacDonald, H.C. Bonsor, Krishan, Gopal, M. S. Rao et al.
The Indo-Gangetic Basin comprises one of the world’s most important aquifers. The basin is \nhome to approximately 1 billion people and encompasses northern and eastern India, much \nof Bangladesh, parts of southern Nepal and the most populous areas of Pakistan. Despite \nthe presence of...
H.C. Bonsor, Alan MacDonald
This report is an output from the project Groundwater resilience to climate change and abstraction in the Indo-Gangetic basin Groundwater resilience to climate change and abstraction in the Indo-Gangetic basin is a two-year (2012-14) DFID-funded research project strengthening the evidence-base li...
Alan MacDonald, H.C. Bonsor, S. V. N. Rao, Krishan Gopal et al.
The Indo‐Gangetic plains comprise the large floodplains of the Indus and Ganges‐Brahmaputra river systems. They are home to approximately 1 billion people and encompass northern and eastern India, much of Bangladesh, parts of southern Nepal and the most populous parts of Pakistan. The economy, po...