In order to determine design capacities for various components of municipal and rural domestic water supply systems, engineers must estimate water requirements for an entire year (water rights), foI the peak season (reservoir storage), for the peak day (pump or treatment plant size), and for peak hour (pipeline sizes). Historically, per capita water use rates have varied Featly between systems, particularly in semiarid regions where outdoor demands are large. The resulting uncertainty in design capacity estimates can cause either inadequate capacities or premature investment. In order to minimize that uncertainty multiple regression and frequency analyses were made of the various water demand parameters mentioned above for 14 systems in Utah and Colorado. Specifically, demand functions are reported for average month, peak month, and peak day. Peak hour demands were also studied but are reported in a different paper. The independent variables which were significant for monthly and daily demands were price of water and an outdoor use index which includes the effect of variation in landscaped area and accounts for use of supplementary ditch or pressure irrigation systems. The demand functions were developed with data from systems varying in size from very small low density rural systems to Salt Lake City's water system. The correlation coefficients (R2) vary from 0.80 to 0.95.(KEY TERMS: municipal water supply; water demand; price elasticity; peak demand.)
WfAMERICAN FORK BOUNTIFUL BRIGHAM CITY CEDAR CITY CENTERVILLE CLEARFIELO CLINTON DELTA
Using scanning electron microscopy it has been possible to demonstrate the location of bacteria on and within the stratum corneum of the human foot. Biopsies taken either by sectioning or by removing stratum corneum with cyanoacrylate ester adhesive were examined using a Jeol JSM-T20 scanning electron microscope. Bacteria could be seen easily on specimens from skin which had been occluded to increase the number of bacteria present. On the surface, bacteria were scattered widely in small colonies (usually containing less than ten bacteria). Although bacteria could be seen around the orifice of sweat ducts they did not preferentially favour these sites. Within the stratum corneum, bacteria could be found as relatively large colonies but these were usually associated with sweat ducts or the underside of the furrows in the skin surface. This study suggests that, in normal skin, bacteria are able to colonize both the surface and the depths of the stratum corneum.
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