man-made salinization
[mæn meɪd ˌsælɪnaɪˈzeɪʃən]
nounfemininepl: man-made salinizations / salinizações antrópicas
salinização antrópica
1. The process of salt accumulation in soil or water bodies caused directly or indirectly by human activities, such as irrigation, mining, industrial discharge, or road salt application
Man-made salinization has degraded agricultural lands in coastal regions due to excessive groundwater pumping.
A salinização antrópica degradou terras agrícolas em regiões costeiras devido ao bombeamento excessivo de água subterrânea.
2. Anthropogenic increase in salt concentration in aquifers, rivers, or soil systems resulting from human intervention
The dam construction led to man-made salinization of the reservoir through altered water circulation patterns.
A construção da barragem levou à salinização antrópica do reservatório através de padrões alterados de circulação de água.
This term is particularly relevant in Brazil and other developing nations experiencing agricultural expansion and irrigation challenges. It's frequently discussed in environmental policy, water resource management, and sustainable agriculture contexts. The term gained prominence in discussions about the São Francisco River integration projects and Northeast Brazil's semi-arid region challenges. In scientific literature, both Portuguese and English terms are used interchangeably in bilingual publications.
Look up more words on Fala2Me
The free English-Portuguese dictionary with real Brazilian accents, NYC slang, conjugator and more
Open Fala2Me →