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Books > Earth & environment
A stylish, inspirational and practical guidebook to maintaining a
more environmentally friendly outdoor space, now shortlisted for
the GMG GARDEN BOOK OF THE YEAR award! Sustainable gardener Marian
Boswall walks us through the process of creating and maintaining a
sustainable outdoor space, offering tips, guidance and step-by-step
projects designed to help you lead a more low-impact lifestyle.
Whether it's by harnessing natural energy, converting to peat-free
compost, reducing your consumption of plastic, saving seeds or
creating garden areas from reclaimed materials, there are numerous
ways - both big and small - to make a difference. Entries cover
every aspect of the garden, from how to create a space and draw up
a plan for your sustainable garden from scratch, to advice on
boundaries and fences, and guidance on how to ethically source
materials to make sure your garden is as environmentally friendly
as it is beautiful. This book also contains several projects with
easy-to-follow instructions that you can replicate at home, such as
creating a frame for succulents to grow in out of recycled
materials. Projects include: Plant an edible hedge - This
berry-laden boundary brings joy into your garden and offers a great
way to connect to and notice the seasons for both children and
adults, Make a lawn spiral - This innovative approach to lawns will
reduce mowing time by half (thereby saving energy) and will create
a beautiful, textured swirl of flowering grass which is good for
pollinators, Make your own frame for succulents - Using recycled
and found materials, create your own vertical planter for a host of
succulents, perfect for balconies or other small spaces, Saving
your seeds - Collecting seeds from your garden is the perfect way
to start planning ahead for your garden next year, all while
reducing waste. Sustainable Garden will guide anyone hoping to take
informed and intelligent decisions to make a difference, but who
perhaps don't know where to begin.
Valorization of Agri-Food Wastes and By-Products: Recent Trends,
Innovations and Sustainability Challenges addresses the waste and
by-product valorization of fruits and vegetables, beverages, nuts
and seeds, dairy and seafood. The book focuses its coverage on
bioactive recovery, health benefits, biofuel production and
environment issues, as well as recent technological developments
surrounding state of the art of food waste management and
innovation. The book also presents tools for value chain analysis
and explores future sustainability challenges. In addition, the
book offers theoretical and experimental information used to
investigate different aspects of the valorization of agri-food
wastes and by-products. Valorization of Agri-Food Wastes and
By-Products: Recent Trends, Innovations and Sustainability
Challenges will be a great resource for food researchers, including
those working in food loss or waste, agricultural processing, and
engineering, food scientists, technologists, agricultural
engineers, and students and professionals working on sustainable
food production and effective management of food loss, wastes and
by-products.
Pastoralist Livelihoods in Asian Drylands brings together the work
of scholars from across Asia to discuss the transforming
boundaries, agencies and risks involved in pastoralist livelihoods.
The authors, whose research sites range from Oman to Mongolia,
Syria to Pakistan, share methodological commitment to long-term
field research, participant observation and engagement with local
communities. There is a focus on pastoralist engagements with
governance institutions and the essays collectively argue that
risk, which is often imagined in environmental terms for
pastoralist peoples, often stems from government policies and
political circumstances. The authors challenge common ecological
approaches to understanding social change amongst pastoralist
groups by focusing on the politics of resource distribution and
control. Papers in the volume support an indigenous perspective on
pastoralists and present academic perceptions and assessments of
key issues in their local context.
Architecture is very multi-disciplinary, attracting many different
professions. This is reflected in the contributions contained in
this volume and that were originally presented at the 9th
International Conference on Harmonisation between Architecture and
Nature. The included works review the challenges and new
opportunities of contemporary architecture as a result of advances
in design and new building technologies, as well as the development
of new materials. Many of the changes are motivated by a drive
towards eco-architecture, trying to harmonise architectural
products with nature. Another important issue is the adaptation of
the architectural design to the natural environment, learning from
nature and traditional construction techniques. Contemporary
architecture is at the threshold of a new stage of evolution,
deeply influenced by the advances in information and computer
systems and the development of new materials and products, as well
as construction processes that will drastically change the
industry. Emphasis is placed on the minimum use of energy at each
stage of the building process, the design by passive systems, life
cycle assessment, resources optimisation and rehabilitation. Never
before in history have architects and engineers had such a range of
new processes and products open to them. In spite of that, the
construction industry lags behind all others in taking advantage of
a wide variety of new technologies. This is understandable, due to
the inherent complexity and uniqueness of each architectural
project. Advances in computer and information systems, including
robotics, offers the possibility of developing new architectural
forms, construction products and building technologies that are
just now starting to emerge. Changes have also taken place in the
way modern society works and lives, due to the impact of modern
technologies. Patterns of work have been disrupted and changed,
affecting transportation and the home environment. The demand is
for a new type of habitat that can respond to the changes and the
consequent requirements in terms of the urban environment. Such
topics are dealt with as building technologies, design by passive
systems, design with nature, cultural sensitivity, life cycle
assessment, resources and rehabilitation and many others including
case studies from many different places around the world.
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Titanic
(Hardcover)
David Ross
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R606
R547
Discovery Miles 5 470
Save R59 (10%)
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Ships in 9 - 17 working days
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On 14 April 1912, less than a week into a transatlantic trip from
Southampton to New York, the largest luxury cruise liner in the
world struck an iceberg off the coast of Labrador, causing the hull
to buckle. The massive 50,000 ton ship hailed as 'unsinkable' was
soon slipping into the cold Atlantic Ocean, the crew and passengers
scrambling to launch lifeboats before being sucked into the deep.
Of the 2,224 passengers and crew aboard, more than 1,500 died,
making the sinking one of the deadliest for a single ship up to
that time. The sinking has captured the public imagination ever
since, in part because of the scale of the tragedy, but also
because the ship represented in microcosm Edwardian society, with
the super-rich sharing the vessel with poor migrants seeking a new
life in North America. Other factors, such as why there were only
enough lifeboats to hold half the passengers, also caused
controversy and led to changes in maritime safety. In later years
many survivors told their stories to the press, and Titanic
celebrates these accounts. A final chapter examines the shipwreck
today, which has been visited underwater by explorers, scientists
and film-makers, and many artifacts recovered as the old liner
steadily disintegrates. Titanic offers a compact, insightful
photographic history of the sinking and its aftermath in 180
authentic photographs.
The OS Historical Map series comprises of Ancient Britain and Roman
Britain. Each archaeological period is identified using different
symbols and colours to show sites from the Stone Age through to the
early Middle Ages against a modern map base, double-sided to cover
the whole country. The Ancient Britain map and guide is
complemented by a timeline that shows British events in relation to
wider history. Key sites of significant historical interest are
highlighted using photographs, text and thumbnail mapping from the
OS Landranger map series. Additional information, such as a list of
archaeological terms, suggested reading and museums to visit, is
also included.
Electrification: Accelerating the Energy Transition offers a widely
applicable framework to delineate context-sensitive pathways by
which this transition can be accelerated and lists the types of
processes and structures that may hinder progress towards this
goal. The framework draws insights from well-established
literature, ranging from technological studies to socio-technical
studies of energy transitions, on to strategic niche management
approaches, (international) political economy approaches, and
institutionalist literatures, while also adopting wider social
theoretical ideas from structuration theory. Contributors discuss a
multitude of case studies drawn from global examples of
electrification projects. Brief case studies and text boxes help
users further understand this domain and the technological,
infrastructural and societal structures that may exercise
significant powers.
Hazardous Gases: Risk Assessment on Environment and Human Health
examines all relevant routes of exposure, inhalation, skin
absorption and ingestion, and control measures of specifics
hazardous gases resulting from workplace exposure from industrial
processes, traffic fumes, and the degradation of waste materials
and how they impacts the health and environment of workers. The
book examines the risk assessment and effect of poisonous gases on
the environment human health. It also covers necessary emergency
guidelines, safety measures, physiological impact, hazard control
measures, handling and storage of hazardous gases. Each chapter is
formatted to include an introduction, historical background,
physicochemical properties, physiological role discussing
mechanisms of toxicity, its effect on human health as well as
environment, followed by case studies and recent research on toxic
gases. Hazardous Gases: Risk Assessment on Environment and Human
Health is a helpful resource for academics and researchers in
toxicology, occupational health and safety, and environmental
sciences as well as those in the field who work to assess and
mitigate the impact of toxic gases on the work environment and the
health of the workforce.
A highly-illustrated, pocket-sized guide to understanding the
forces that have shaped the world's cities from the dawn of
civilisation to the present day. The fortunes of towns and cities
rise and fall along with the fate of the civilisations to which
they belong. Some are lost entirely, now no more than ruins; others
have thrived as urban centres for millennia; and all contain vital
clues embedded in their streets and skylines which reveal why their
inhabitants grouped together, and tell of their unique social,
political and cultural histories. Packed with plans, maps, and
drawings, this book takes you on an international journey of
discovery to explore the history of cities from our earliest urban
origins to the contemporary world city - from Babylon to Beijing,
London to Paris, and from the skyscrapers of New York to the
streets of their own home town. A must-read for anyone interested
in history, cities, and travel, this fascinating book turns you
into an urban detective to see how our towns and cities grew the
way they are.
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