Water Everywhere—Farm Ponds, 1948
Scope and Contents
B/W - Sound - 16 mm - 00:11:00 The second in a series of four films prepared especially for school use by the Soil Conservation Service. This film tells the story of water; its numerous values and its potential destructive power when uncontrolled. It develops the theme that water is essential to all life and that the most valuable water is that which soaks into the ground where it falls as rain or snow; while the most destructive water is permitted to run off uncontrolled from the ground where it falls. SEE: Erosion, Soil and Water Conservation, and Topsoil for other films in this school series
Dates
- Creation: 1948
Creator
Language of Materials
From the Collection: English
From the Collection: Spanish; Castilian
Repository Details
Part of the National Agricultural Library Special Collections Repository
National Agricultural Library
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Room 309
Beltsville Maryland 20705 USA
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