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Subjective vision and human relationships in the novels of Rosamond LehmannDorosz, Wiktoria. January 1975 (has links)
Thesis--Uppsala. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 136-140).
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The biological impact of culture contact a bioarchaeological study of Roman colonialism in Britain /Peck, Joshua James, January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Ohio State University, 2009. / Title from first page of PDF file. Includes bibliographical references (p. 191-218).
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Jane Addams: Pragmatismus und Sozialreform : pädagogische Theorie und Praxis der Progressive Era /Pinhard, Inga. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Universität, Frankfurt am Main. / Includes bibliographical references.
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THE HISTORY OF MAN'S INFLUENCE UPON THE VEGETATION OF THE CHIRICAHUA MOUNTAIN MEADOWS.Russell, Robert Patrick. January 1982 (has links)
No description available.
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Cold : its demands and suggestions : a study of the importance of environment in the development of Eskimo cultureNusbaum, Deric January 1939 (has links)
No description available.
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Predicting, valuing and managing wildlife crop raiding in the Luangwa valley, Zambia.Nyirenda, Vincent R. January 2012 (has links)
Thesis (DTech. degree in Nature Conservation.)--Tshwane University of Technology, 2012. / Wildlife crop raiding is a pervasive and widespread problem. The purpose of the study is to investigate and understand underlying processes and structures associated with the crop raiding problem in the Luangwa Valley, Zambia in order to technically and scientifically support decisions by farmers and other stakeholders regarding crop raiding.
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FACTORS INFLUENCING ARIZONA BAT POPULATION LEVELSReidinger, Russell Frederick, 1945- January 1972 (has links)
No description available.
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Population, contact, and climate in the New Mexican pueblosZubrow, Ezra B. W. January 1969 (has links)
No description available.
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The myth of ’sustainable development’ : the ecological footprint of Japanese consumptionWada, Yoshihiko 11 1900 (has links)
Japan has often been cited as an example of a nation which is achieving the
objectives of'sustainable development' as advocated by the Brundtland Commission.
Various commentators believe that Japan attained rapid economic growth (at least until the
current economic crisis which began in the early 1990s) while simultaneously protecting its
environment, particularly after the oil crisis in 1973. However, this perspective ignores the
fact that Japan's economic 'miracle' still involves the consumption of large quantities of
low-entropy natural resources, and makes heavy use of the ecosphere's assimilative
capacity for high-entropy wastes.
Monetary analyses are excessively abstracted from biophysical reality and are
therefore incapable of providing ecologically meaningful indices of sustainable
development. Various biophysical approaches to assessment of sustainability have been
proposed to fill the gap. In this dissertation, I use one of these, 'ecological footprint
analysis,' to reassess the Japanese success story. The ecological footprint (EF) of a
specified population has been defined as "the aggregate area of land and water ecosystems
required continuously to produce the resource inputs and to assimilate the resource
outputs of that population wherever on earth the land/water may be located." It provides
a useful sustainability indicator in the form of the difference between a given country's
ecological footprint and its domestic area of ecologically productive land/water. The gap
between the two represents that country's 'ecological deficit' or 'sustainability gap.'
Data from 1880 indicate that the per capita Japanese EF in the pre-industrial era was
about 0.4 hectares (ha). By 1991 it had risen to 4.7 ha per person. Far from 'decoupling
from nature,' the historic trend has seen a ten-fold increase in Japan's per capita load on
the ecosphere. Japan is running a massive ecological deficit with the rest of the world.
Moreover, since there are only about 1.5 ha of ecologically productive land and 0.5 ha of
ecologically productive ocean per capita on Earth, Japanese material standards cannot be
extended to the entire world population without depleting natural resource stocks. I
conclude that the current level and form of Japanese resource consumption would be
unsustainable if every country tried to do the same. Global society needs to consider
alternative development paths that will reduce resource consumption by the inhabitants of
high-income countries while enhancing their quality of life.
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The changing plant associations of Martinique from pre-Columbian times to the present day.Beaulieu, Andrée. January 1965 (has links)
En Amérique tropicale et aux Antilles, le milieu naturel a déjà été l'objet d'une dégradation première de la part des populations précolombiennes: Incas et Mayas sur la terre ferme, Arawaks et Carafbes dans les îles. Cette dégradation n'a fait que s'accentuer lors de la découverte du Nouveau Monde et surtout à la suite de l'introduction des méthodes culturales européennes, il y a trois siècles, par les colons espagnols, portuguais, hollandais, anglais ou français. [...]
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