Popis: |
In the second half of the twentieth century South Africa built up a reputation as one of the foremost countries of the world in terms of water infrastructure development. Dam projects such as the Orange River Scheme and the purification of sewage water to drinking water standards in the Namibian capital of Windhoek, were some of the many achievements that South Africa boasted. " "How was it possible then for a country that was politically isolated to accumulate significant knowledge on the water sector and literally be on top of their game? A partial answer to this riddle is the Waterlit Collection (WLC), a collection of articles, reports and academic theses and dissertations collected and managed at the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) in Pretoria between the years 1974 and the mid–1990s. " "The article provides a historical overview of how the WLC of the CSIR, funded by the Water Research Commission (WRC), was turned into a corpus of more than 300 000 documents. Local research output of the time, as well as some of the latest research findings of the day in other parts of the world, were accessible to water researchers in South Africa. There is reason to believe that the collection contributed to water research in South Africa during the years of isolation. The collection also contributed to some of the country s breakthrough technologies in the water sector. " "The study also explores how the rapid development of information technologies in library science, computer science and the evolution of widespread Internet use, influenced the collection which currently forms part of the South African Water History Archival Repository (SAWHAR) at North–West University s Vaal Campus in Vanderbijlpark, Gauteng. http://hdl.handle.net/10520/EJC172257 |