Even I know that one!sort of like they wouldnt put in the CERM that normal roadway crown is 2.0%, Every idiot who does transportation knows that.
a suggestion that i might make, that I think is within the spirit of the agreement (please let me know if you think there is any doubt and I will delete) is that you should think of these problems in terms of the ones you know. for example, I think that they would not have you assume the 2% crown in a roadway problem. if it was not given, then you did not need it. the CERM preamble tells you that they will give you extraneous information that you need to weed through to find the stuff you need for the answer. i think that when you are working in subjects that are not your strength you tend to over-compensate or overthink them. this has been my experience in past failure long ago. if they don't give you the crown, you probably don't need it.sort of like they wouldnt put in the CERM that normal roadway crown is 2.0%, Every idiot who does transportation knows that.
thanks, I just ordered the 1st one!For definitions, a good resource is "A Dictionary of Environmental & Civil Engineering" by Len F. Webster - it's pricey, but also available at college libraries.
Another one - slightly less helpful, but still good is "Environmental Engineering Dictionary" by CC Lee - I used this one because someone beat me to the Webster at the library....
I took a bunch of references for qualitative enviro questions and still missed a few "chippies", I think - sounds like VTEnviro named some good ones..
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