var exresdb; if (!exresdb) exresdb = {"water":{"extype":"traveling", "print_name":"Water: H20=Life", "venues":{"AMNH":{"open":20071103, "close":20080526}, "SCC":{"open":20080518, "close":20081015}}, "baseURL":"", "basemap":"?section=exmap", "sections":{"1.0":{"rel_link":"?section=introduction", "sname":"Water Unites Us", "thumbnail":"1.0-water_unites.jpg", "description":"Water is essential to life as we know it. And as it cycles from the air to the land to the sea and back again, water shapes our planet—and nearly every aspect of our lives.", "mx":0.1935483870967742, "my":0.054430379746}, "1.1":{"rel_link":"?section=introduction", "sname":"Water Surrounds Us", "thumbnail":"1.1-fogcurtain_med.jpg", "description":"Its force and abundance are the backdrop of our lives. 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Most scientists argue for an origin in the planet itself...Others speculate that some water was delivered from outer space, by comets or asteroids crashing into Earth.", "mx":0.14193548387096774, "my":0.3430379746}, "3.4":{"rel_link":"?section=waterwater", "sname":"Science on a Sphere", "thumbnail":"3.4-waterplanet_med.jpg", "description":"Science on a Sphere projects actual moving images of the Earth from space onto a six-foot-diameter globe.", "mx":0.3, "my":0.4468354430379747}, "3.5":{"rel_link":"?section=blueplanet&page=blueplanet_e", "sname":"Water Power", "thumbnail":"3.5-water_power.jpg", "description":"The single most important force shaping Earth's surface is moving water. Falling and running water weathers and erodes rocks... 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But humans put water to work for hundreds of other purposes—raising animals and crops, generating power, making paper, keeping lawns green.", "mx":0.6838709677419355, "my":0.3341772151898734}, "4.1":{"rel_link":"?section=waterworks&page=waterworks_b", "sname":"Water Use", "thumbnail":"4.1-water_use_graph.jpg", "description":"There are trillions of gallons of liquid fresh water on Earth. 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The Three Gorges Dam, named for the steep, winding canyons upriver, should provide 10 percent of China's electricity.", "mx":0.7935483870967742, "my":0.51898734177}, "4.4":{"rel_link":"?section=waterworks&page=waterworks_b", "sname":"Water to Rice To Dynasty", "thumbnail":"4.4-water_rice_dynasty.jpg", "description":"...in 256 BC, governor and engineer Li Bing designed a system of dams, dikes and channels to control the Min River while also delivering a reliable water supply to rice farmers. The basic design of the so-called Dujiangyan project is still in use today.", "mx":0.7290322580645161, "my":0.41645569620}, "4.5":{"rel_link":"?section=waterworks&page=waterworks_e", "sname":"Removing a Dam", "thumbnail":"4.5-removing_a_dam.jpg", "description":"After many decades, a dam's reservoir becomes choked with sediment and the dam itself needs extensive maintenance. 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A tributary of the Mekong River switches directions, sending a flood of water into Cambodia's Great Lake, or Tonle Sap, which swells to six times its previous size.", "mx":0.27419354838709675, "my":0.6012658227848101}, "6.2":{"rel_link":"?section=waterwater&page=waterwater_c", "sname":"Scooping the Ocean Floor", "thumbnail":"6.2-scooping_the_floor.jpg", "description":"One of the most harmful fishing practices is bottom trawling, in which a ship drags a huge, weighted net across the ocean floor.", "mx":0.3193548387096774, "my":0.6835443037974683}, "6.4":{"rel_link":"?section=waterwater&page=waterwater_d", "sname":"Living on Melting Ice", "thumbnail":"6.4-polarbear_med.jpg", "description":"Polar bears spend most of their time on floating sheets of sea ice hunting for their favorite food, seals. 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That kind of water scarcity isn't just about too little rain—it's a problem of politics, infrastructure and sustainable use.", "mx":0.6451612903225806, "my":0.6025316455696202}, "7.1":{"rel_link":"?section=noranydrop&page=noranydrop_d", "sname":"A River in Danger", "thumbnail":"7.1-river_in_danger.jpg", "description":"...today, in dry seasons, the Ganges no longer reaches the sea. Climate change is shrinking the glaciers that feed the river high in the Himalayan mountain chain, reducing its flow. In addition, humans divert much Ganges water for their own uses.", "mx":0.7064516129032258, "my":0.5822784810126582}, "7.2":{"rel_link":"?section=noranydrop&page=noranydrop_e", "sname":"The Weight of Water", "thumbnail":"7.2-weight_of_water.jpg", "description":"Try lifting a three-gallon jug of water. Be careful, because water weighs a lot. You won't be able to put it on your head, which is the way many people carry water over very long distances.", "mx":0.7645161290322581, "my":0.6063291139240506}, "7.3":{"rel_link":"?section=noranydrop&page=noranydrop_f", "sname":"Harvest from the Sky", "thumbnail":"7.3-harvest_the_sky.jpg", "description":"Harvesting is the term water experts use to describe the process of capturing rain before it has a chance to soak into the soil or run off into streams.", "mx":0.8258064516129032, "my":0.6329113924050633}, "7.4":{"rel_link":"?section=noranydrop&page=noranydrop_b", "sname":"Not Enough", "thumbnail":"7.4-waterjugs.jpg", "description":"In 27 developing countries, most of them in Asia and Africa, clean, relatively convenient water is unavailable to half their rural population, or about 900 million people.", "mx":0.7290322580645161, "my":0.6582278481012658}, "7.5":{"rel_link":"?section=noranydrop&page=noranydrop_i", "sname":"How Green Is My Desert?", "thumbnail":"7.5-how_green_desert.jpg", "description":"Today, new cities are appearing in arid regions around the world...The price of watering our deserts can include destruction of the fragile desert ecosystem, groundwater depletion and lowered rivers.", "mx":0.8225806451612904, "my":0.7189873417721518}, "7.6":{"rel_link":"?section=noranydrop&page=noranydrop_h", "sname":"Water from Air", "thumbnail":"7.6-water_from_air.jpg", "description":"Nearly every continent on Earth has a few places in which an unusual phenomenon takes place: an arid coastal region is blanketed daily by dense fog coming in off the ocean. 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The water flows to an elevated storage tank, shown in the model, where it is kept sanitary for drinking.", "mx":0.6612903225806451, "my":0.7569620253164557}, "7.9":{"rel_link":"?section=noranydrop&page=noranydrop_g", "sname":"Hold the Salt", "thumbnail":"7.9-hold_the_salt.jpg", "description":"The oceans are vast, so it's no wonder that people have often looked seaward and wondered, “Isn't there a way we could drink that water?”", "mx":0.7193548387096774, "my":0.7316455696202532}, "8.0":{"rel_link":"?section=healthywater", "sname":"Healthy Water, Healthy Lives", "thumbnail":"8.0-healthy_water.jpg", "description":"How do we make sure there is enough healthy fresh water, not just for ourselves, but for all forms of life? We can start by remembering that what we discard will eventually be in someone—or something—else's water. 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The drop can contain thousands of tiny organisms, such as algae, protozoans, bacteria and viruses.", "mx":0.4, "my":0.7620253164556962}, "8.5":{"rel_link":"?section=healthywater&page=healthywater_b", "sname":"Your Water on Tap", "thumbnail":"8.5-water_on_tap.jpg", "description":"Any drop of untreated water, from a lake, a river or the ocean, is a world in miniature. The drop can contain thousands of tiny organisms, such as algae, protozoans, bacteria and viruses.", "mx":0.3419354838709677, "my":0.78607594936}, "8.6":{"rel_link":"?section=healthywater&page=healthywater_d", "sname":"True Value", "thumbnail":"8.6-true_value.jpg", "description":"For centuries, wetlands...were considered useless, waterlogged, even dangerous land better off filled, farmed and developed. 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Built by sediments deposited by the Mississippi River over thousands of years, the delta is at the mercy of the river's path.", "mx":0.8225806451612904, "my":0.8341772151898734}, "9.3":{"rel_link":"?section=regeneration&page=regeneration_d", "sname":"Mono Lake", "thumbnail":"9.3-monolake_med.jpg", "description":"Mono Lake, in eastern California, is a strange, salty place. The lake teems with trillions of brine shrimp but no fish swim in the salt water...", "mx":0.7193548387096774, "my":0.910126582278481}, "10.0":{"rel_link":"?section=epilogue", "sname":"Epilogue", "thumbnail":"10.0-what_can_we_do.jpg", "description":"Clean, plentiful water is not always available where and when it's needed. Indeed, water shortages and pollution threaten individuals, communities and countries around the globe. 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