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Books > Earth & environment > Earth sciences > Geology & the lithosphere
This book successfully connects archaeology and archaeometallurgy
with geoscience and metallurgy. It addresses topics concerning ore
deposits, archaeological field evidence of early metal production,
and basic chemical-physical principles, as well as experimental
ethnographic works on a low handicraft base and artisanal metal
production to help readers better understand what happened in
antiquity. The book is chiefly intended for scholars and students
engaged in interdisciplinary work.
Written by highly qualified Argentine scientists and scholars, this
book focuses on the uninterrupted geological and paleontological
record of Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego since the Miocene-Pliocene
boundary to the arrival of man and modern times. This region is an
outstanding area for research, with significant interest at the
international level. It provides an updated overview of the
scientific work in all related fields with a strong paleoclimatic
approach. Patagonia has also been a sort of a "paleoclimatic
bridge" between the Antarctic Peninsula and the more northerly land
masses, since the final opening of the Drake Passage in the middle
Miocene. Timely and comprehensive, "The Late Cenozoic of Patagonia
and Tierra del Fuego" is the only monograph book written in
English.
* One-stop resource for paleontological information of the Late
Cenozoic of Patagonia
* Covers 5 million years in the uninterrupted history of Patagonia
and Tierra del Fuego
* Comprehensive coverage of the region written by highly qualified
Argentine scientists and scholars
This volume gathers the latest advances, innovations, and
applications in the field of mining, geology and geo-spatial
technologies, as presented by leading researchers and engineers at
the International Conference on Innovations for Sustainable and
Responsible Mining (ISRM), held in Hanoi, Vietnam on October 15-17
2020. The contributions cover a diverse range of topics, including
mining technology, drilling and blasting engineering, tunneling and
geotechnical applications, mineral processing, mine management and
economy, environmental risk assessment and management, mining and
local development, mined land rehabilitation, water management and
hydrogeology, regional Geology and tectonics, spatial engineering
for monitoring natural resources and environment change, GIS and
remote sensing for natural disaster monitoring, risk mapping and
revisualization, natural resources monitoring and management, mine
occupational safety and health. Selected by means of a rigorous
peer-review process, they will spur novel research directions and
foster future multidisciplinary collaborations.
Arsenic is likely the most talked-about metalloid in the modern
world because of its toxic effects on both animal and plants.
Further, arsenic pollution is now producing negative impacts on
food security, especially in many south Asian countries. Since
plants are a major food source, their adaptation to As-rich
environments is essential, as is being informed about recent
findings on multifarious aspects of the mechanisms of arsenic
toxicity and tolerance in plants. Although numerous research works
and review articles have been published in journals, annual reviews
and as book chapters, to date there has been no comprehensive book
on this topic. This book contains 19 informative chapters on
arsenic chemistry, plant uptake, toxicity and tolerance mechanisms,
as well as approaches to mitigation. Readers will be introduced to
the latest findings on plant responses to arsenic toxicity, various
tolerance mechanisms, and remediation techniques. As such, the book
offers a timely and valuable resource for a broad audience,
including plant scientists, soil scientists, environmental
scientists, agronomists, botanists and molecular biologists.
Sediments and Ecohyraulics is comprised of papers submitted to the
6th International Conference on Cohesive Sediments (INTERCOH 2005)
held in Saga, Japan, September 2005. The papers are divided into
two major categories. The first is basic processes, including
erosion, settling, flocculation, and consolidation. The second
major catagory is application of the understanding of cohesive
sediments to address specific issues, including waterway and part
management, fluid mud behavior, and contaminiated sediment
management.
*Provides an up-to-date resource of the present knowledge of
cohesive sediment transport processes
*Contains practical solutions on cohesive transport problems
*Presents information on managing cohesive sediments
This book reviews the hydrogeology of karst systems, starting with
the classifications from the applied point of view, and then the
hydraulic parameters (porosity, permeability, and transmissivity).
It also addresses the karstification process, its resulting forms,
and their hydrogeological significance. Besides, the author
describes possible models of karstic aquifers and their
characterization. The book also explains the classical methods for
analyzing hydrograms of karst springs and deepens the analysis of
time series, as a preliminary phase to the mathematical simulation
of karst aquifers. Finally, it introduces the hydrogeochemical
characterization of karst, of the processes involved as well as the
possible pollution and protection of karst aquifers. This book is
intended to be of interest for professionals in hydrogeology as
well as graduate and undergraduate students.
This book discusses how research efforts have established an
organic link between pedology and edaphology of five
pedogenetically important soil orders as Alfisols, Mollisols,
Ultisols, Vertisols and Inceptisols of tropical Indian
environments. The book highlights how this new knowledge was gained
when research efforts were complemented by high resolution
mineralogical, micro morphological and age-control tools. This
advancement in basic and fundamental knowledge on Indian tropical
soils makes it possible to develop several index soil properties as
simple methods to study their pedology and edaphology. More than
one-third of the world's soils are tropical soils. Thus the recent
advances in developing simple and ingenuous methods to study
pedology and edaphology of Indian tropical soils may also be
adopted by both graduate students and young soil researchers to aid
in the development of a national soil information system to enhance
crop productivity and maintain soil health in the 21st century.
This book establishes the equations of limit analysis and provides
a complete theoretical basis for foundation capacity, slope
stability, and earth pressure. It is divided into three parts, the
first of which discusses the failure mode and fundamental equation
of soil mass. The second part addresses the solution methods for
limit analysis, including the characteristic line method, stress
field method, limit equilibrium method, virtual work equation-based
generalized limit equilibrium method and generalized limit
equilibrium method for the surface failure mode. Lastly, the third
part examines the application of the limit analysis theory to soil
mass.
This book investigates the role of the National Petroleum Council
(CNP) and especially of Petrobras in the construction and shaping
of courses in Geosciences, as part of the historical process of the
search for and exploration of oil, which began in Brazil in 1864
and ended in 1968 with the discovery of the first offshore well.
The book explores the history of the discovery of oil in Brazil
together with the historical development of oil research and
geosciences in Brazil. It also elucidates significant events and
developments which occurred between 1864 and 1968 such as the
foundation of the Ouro Preto Mining School, the foundation of the
CNP and Petrobras and other scientific societies and universities
and their contributions to the formation and constitution of
geosciences in Brazil. This book also discusses the massive
investments by CNP and Petrobras in technical and scientific
research for oil exploration in the Brazilian territory.This unique
book appeals to scientists, students and professionals in
geosciences, history and related fields.
This book highlights major problems in the statistical analysis of
compositions that have been known for over a century, as well as
the corresponding solutions that have been put forward by
specialists over the past 30 years. The basic assumptions of
normality or multi-normality are pointed out and methods to test
and achieve them are also covered. The conventional major and trace
element geochemistry and modeling equations are discussed, and are
followed by a more sophisticated multidimensional approach to data
handling. The book's main focus is on the use of statistical
techniques to facilitate data interpretation. It also highlights
the classification (or nomenclature) and tectonic discrimination
aspects for both igneous and sedimentary rocks. The book concludes
by discussing computer programs that are helping pave the way from
geochemistry to geochemometrics. Written by a leading expert in the
area of geochemistry, it offers a valuable guide for students and
professionals in the area.
This book presents the outcomes of the workshop sponsored by the
National Natural Sciences Foundation of China and the UK Newton
Fund, British Council Researcher Links. The Workshop was held in
Harbin, China, from 14 to 17 July 2017, and brought together some
thirty young (postdoctoral) researchers from China and the UK
specializing in geosciences, sensor signal networks and their
applications to natural disaster recovery. The Workshop
presentations covered the state of the art in the area of disaster
recovery and blended wireless sensor systems that act as early
warning systems to mitigate the consequences of disasters and
function as post-disaster recovery vehicles. This book promotes
knowledge transfer and helps readers explore and identify research
opportunities by highlighting research outcomes in the
internationally relevant area of disaster recovery and mitigation.
Showcases the excellent data science environment in Python.
Provides examples for readers to replicate, adapt, extend, and
improve. Covers the crucial knowledge needed by geographic data
scientist.
This book provides a comprehensive coverage of the theory and
principle of the Hoek-Brown (HB) failure criterion, methods or
guidelines for estimating the HB input parameters, and the
methodology of application of the HB criterion in rock engineering
projects. It aims to help researchers, engineers and research
students who work in the area of rock mechanics and mining
engineering. Academics can quickly obtain an overview of the state
of the art of the theory and principle of the Hoek-Brown criterion
by reading the book before they advance their researches on the
topics related to rock failure criteria. Geotechnical engineers can
select appropriate Hoek-Brown input parameters for the design and
analysis of rock engineering projects with the help of the
principles introduced in this book. Research students may use the
book as a textbook to learn the principle of rock mechanics related
to rock mass properties.
This thesis encompasses a study of past precipitation patterns
based on six cave stalagmites from different parts of the Indian
Himalaya. This is the first speleothem study in the Indian Himalaya
that shows a direct relationship between past precipitation and the
collapse of civilization. The stalagmites examined were KL-3 from
Jammu and Kashmir; TCS and BR-1 from Himachal Pradesh; and DH-1,
SA-1 and CH-1 from Uttarakhand. Based on the high-resolution
palaeoclimatic reconstruction (35 U/th dates, 5 AMS dates, 1,500
samples for 18O and 13C values) obtained for the duration of the
Pleistocene-Holocene transition (16.2-9.5 ka BP) and
Mid-Holocene-Present (ca. 4.0 ka BP-Present), three major events
were identified, namely the Older Dryas (OD), Bolling-Allerod (BA)
period and Younger Dryas (YD) at ca. 14.3-13.9, 13.9-12.7 and
12.7-12.2 ka BP, respectively. The study showed a gradual reduction
in the precipitation from 4 ka BP onwards for about a millennium
with a peak arid period between 3.2 and 3.1 ka BP. According to the
findings, the LIA (Little Ice Age) covers a time span from
1622-1820 AD, during which the climate was wetter than that in the
post-LIA period (1820-1950 AD). In addition, this thesis supports
the assumption that the WDs (Western Disturbances) contribute
significantly to the total rainfall in the Himalaya region.
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