Conclusions
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1.
All necessary prerequisites are present for the normal and even intensive use of high water-table lands.
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2.
In regions where reservoirs are being created preparation of the high water-table lands for normal use must be included in the plan of State undertakings, which will permit preserving and using the wealth of natural fertility, strenghthening the fodder base of animal husbandry, and avoiding loss of forest resources.
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3.
It is necessary to eliminate the practice of using high water-table lands as pastures, since grazing on excessively wet lands is inadmissible.
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Literature Cited
I. F. Rusinov, “Reclamation of shallows and high water-table lands in the vicinity of hydroelectric station reservoirs,” Gidrotekhnika i Melioratsiya, No. 11 (1964).
N. V. Kolobov and M. V. Vereshchagin, “Effect of the Kuibyshev and Volgograd reservoirs on the meteorological conditions in the shore zone,” Reports of the First Scientific and Technical Conference on a Study of Kuibyshev Reservoir [in Russian], No. 2, Kuibyshev (1963).
P. I. Nikulin, “Wind-driven rise and fall of the water level in a reservoir and method of their calculation and prediction,” in: Collection of Works of the Komsomol'sk Hydrometeorological Office [in Russian], No. 4, Kuibyshev (1964).
Additional information
Translated from Gidrotekhnicheskoe Stroitel'stvo, No. 9, pp. 38—39, September, 1969.
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Petrov, G.N., Kotova, N.G. Utilization of lands with high water tables in the vicinity of hydroelectric station reservoirs. Hydrotechnical Construction 3, 835–837 (1969). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02395835
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02395835