631 |
Connecting the lost landscape: waterfront redevelopment of southeast of Stanley BayShi, Xuanxuan., 石璇璇. January 2007 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Architecture / Master / Master of Landscape Architecture
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632 |
Success factors for small and medium enterprises in Nelson Mandela Bay Metropolitan Municipality.Dano, Zukiswa Zuziwe. January 2014 (has links)
M. Tech. Business Administration / Small and Medium Enterprises play a crucial role in national economic development, yet their failure rate is very high. The purpose of this study was to investigate the success factors for Small and Medium Enterprises in Nelson Mandela Metropolitan Municipality.
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633 |
High density urban form: a case study of Quarry Bay, Hong Kong徐漢榕, Tsui, Hon-yung. January 1996 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Urban Design / Master / Master of Urban Design
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634 |
Commuting costs in Hong Kong with reference to residents in Discovery BayWong, Sau-kuen, 黃秀娟 January 2003 (has links)
published_or_final_version / abstract / toc / Transport Policy and Planning / Master / Master of Arts in Transport Policy and Planning
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Modes of production and guaranteed annual income in James Bay Cree societyScott, Colin H. (Colin Hartley) January 1979 (has links)
No description available.
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Land use analysis using GIS : a case study of Richards Bay Minerals' Zulti South mining lease area.Oellermann, Carl Gunter. January 2001 (has links)
The past centuries have been marked with massive land conversions from one land use category, usually natural vegetation, to another. The forces that drive these land use changes are complex and poorly understood. However, the study of land has been revolutionised by the introduction of spatial tools such as remote sensing and GIS that automate these complex issues and assist in the solutions of these geographic problems. Land use identification and classification techniques were used in conjunction with GIS to consistently and accurately extract and incorporate land use data from a series of remotely sensed images of Richards Bay Mineral's Zulti South Mineral lease. Eight land use types from Zulti South were identified and mapped from six different remotely sensed images taken at different time periods between the 21 st of September 1990 and the 1st of June 2001. This mapping technique was shown to have an accuracy of 87.6%. The data collated from this study enabled the monitoring and representation of the temporal and spatial differences in land use within a GIS. From the analysis carried in the GIS the land use dynamics within the lease could be quantified and modelled. The time series of the land use datasets indicated how much of the landscape is changing, what changes have occurred and where these changes are taking place. Accurate and timely mapping of land use provides vital information on the state of the mineral lease area and its environment, and facilitates the development of spatial trends from which predictions of land use and land use change can be made. / Thesis (M.Sc.)-University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2001.
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From Fur to Felt Hats: The Hudson’s Bay Company and the Consumer Revolution in Britain, 1670-1730Hawkins, Natalie 08 May 2014 (has links)
This dissertation seeks to explore the wide reaching effects of the ‘Consumer Revolution of the Augustan Period’ (1680-1750) by examining the Hudson’s Bay Company from the perspective of the London metropole. During this period, newly imported and manufactured goods began flooding English markets. For the first time, members of the middling and lower sorts were able to afford those items which had previously been deemed ‘luxuries.’ One of these luxuries was the beaver felt hat, which had previously been restricted to the wealthy aristocracy and gentry because of its great cost. However, because of the HBC’s exports of beaver fur from Rupert’s Land making beaver widely available and therefore, less expensive, those outside of the privileged upper sorts were finally able to enjoy this commodity. Thus, the focus here will be on the furs leaving North America, specifically Hudson’s Bay, between 1670 and 1730, and consider the subsequent consumption of those furs by the British and European markets. This thesis examines English fashion, social, economic, and political history to understand the Hudson’s Bay Company and the Consumer Revolution, and their effects on one another.
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638 |
Behavioral responses of juvenile sandbar sharks, Carcharhinus plumbeus, to direct current and alternating current stimuliFitzgerald, Timothy P. 12 January 2012 (has links)
Heading on microfiche: Fitzgerald, Timothy Patrick.
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Hawaii at Manoa, 2002.
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 45-50).
Also available on microfiche.
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639 |
Community Structure of Cliff-Top Coastal Heathlands in Botany Bay National Park, SydneyJanuary 1998 (has links)
This thesis examines community structure of cliff-top coastal heathlands in Botany Bay National Park, Sydney. Community properties of floristic composition, structure and species richness are investigated. This investigation is made in order to assess the justification for contemporary pre-emphasis in local studies on individual community properties. It is also made in order to assess the relative and independent contributions of individual properties to variance in overall community structure. It is also made in order to assess the relative utility of multi-property classifications in summarising community structure of cliff-top coastal heathlands. First, the presence of determinable structure in each property is assessed through multivariate classification of respective data sets. Secondly, a new model of community structure is developed in which the hypothesis that community structure is a function of common (shared) and independent (unique) variance in each of the three properties is assessed. This is achieved through application of variance partitioning using correspondence analysis techniques. Thirdly, a matrix combining variance in all three properties is classified. This classification is compared with those of individual properties in order to assess the hypothesis that more ecologically cohesive classifications than those of single properties are obtainable. The ecological significance (environmental relativity) of all classifications and variance components is assessed through examination of relationships with variance in 20 environmental factors which encompass variation in maritime factors, soil physical factors, soil nutrition factors and effects of time since fire. Classifications of individual properties showed the presence of determinable structure in each. Eleven floristic complexes, nine structural complexes and eighteen species richness complexes were recognised. Nineteen community complexes were recognised from the classification of the combined property matrix. All complexes were shown to differ significantly with respect to multiple environmental factors. Variance partitioning showed the presence of both independent and common variance components with respect to properties compared pairwise. These were all shown to differ in magnitude. Examination of environmental correlates showed ecological differentiation of all properties and most variance components. Maritime and fire factors provide a major axis of environmental differentiation for most properties and variance components. A second major axis was resolved with respect to physical soil factors. With the exception of variance in species richness, major soil nutrients were generally of secondary importance to community structure. Low soil nutrients may demarcate heathlands from other vegetation types. However, this study shows elevated importance of other major areas of environment for community structure within cliff-top coastal heathlands. Comparisons of environmental homogeneity characteristics between all classification systems showed the classification of the combined property matrix to be more ecologically robust than those of structure or species richness. Homogeneity characteristics of the combined classification remained statistically inseparable from that of floristic composition. However, studies provided some evidence suggesting greater robustness of the combined classification with regard to fine-scale variance in community structure. This thesis shows that variance in all major community properties of the studied vegetation to be of ecological significance. It also shows that this significance is differential with respect to properties and their variance components. Pre-emphasis on individual properties in syntheses of local systems thus involves the loss of ecological information. I thus conclude that if adequate ecological syntheses of cliff-top coastal heathlands are to be obtained which are appropriate to their scale of distribution and functioning in the Sydney area then inclusion of attributes of multiple properties is required. Equally, multiple sources of environmental variation need to be examined.
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Bristol Bay and the Pebble Project red or gold? /Cunningham, Kelly J. January 1900 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.E.S.)--Evergreen State College, 2008. / "June, 2008." Title from title screen (viewed 4/8/2010). Includes bibliographical references.
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