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Charnockite formation in southern IndiaJackson, David Hart January 1990 (has links)
A stepped heating gas extraction technique has been developed which is capable of isolating C02 released by fluid inclusions from that released by contamination and other sources. In some cases specific generations of inclusions may be extracted. This technique represents a significant advance in the measurement of carbon isotopes from fluid inclusions. Isotopic results are reproducible to ± 0.296 for gas-rich samples, but sample heterogeneity results in variable yield measurements (occasionally up to 200%). The technique has been applied to charnockites and related rocks from South India to constrain the role of C02 in their petrogenesis. Results from a data base of 65 samples show that charnocidtes released more inclusion-C02 than did associated amphibolite facies gneisses, implying that C02 plays a significant role in charnockite formation. Field observations and theoretical phase equilibria, suggest incipient charnockites (partially transformed gneiss) form by sub-solidus transformation (induced by influx of C02) and by melting (triggered by influx of mixed C02-H20). This melting reaction occurs at least 50°C below vapour-absent melting, so it may be an important mechanism for granulite and granite formation in the middle and lower crust. Massive charnockites (monotonous granulite) are believed to form mainly by direct crystallisation from a H20-poor, C02-rich melt. 513C values support radiogenic and field evidence for at least two charnockite formation events in South India. The 2500 Ga event at the southern margin of the Archxan Craton yields a range of 613C values (-4%o to -13%o), tentatively interpreted as C02 derived from subducting sediments. The younger event (500 Ma) affects the southern blocks (of probable early Proterozoic age), and is characterised by a bimodal distribution of 813C values (-6%o to -7%o and -9%o to -13%o). A sub-continental lithospheric source of C02 (transported by magmas associated with crustal extension) is suggested by the heavier values. The lighter isotopes result mainly from mixing between this mantle source and organic graphite, but inclusion capture during an earlier event cannot be ruled out in a few cases. C02-rich fluids are found to propagate by advective fluid flow through a microhydraulic fracture mechanism. A detailed case study of local charnockite formation indicates that isotope and reaction fronts are diffuse, almost over the entire distance of fluid flow (60 m), and fluid/rock disequilibrium suggests that fluid-rock ratios must be treated with care.
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The social relevance of postgraduate management education : a case study of IndiaVyakarnam, Shailendra January 1987 (has links)
The study reported here, consists of three main parts. The first deals with the issue of the importance on management education in a poor country, some of the reported effects and therefore the question of relevance is raised. Proponents of the free market system argue that the only role of a manager is to make a profit for the business. However, in a country like India where the majority of the population is outside the mainstream of modern industrial life, there are arguments that freedom to make a profit should be accompanied by social responsibility because this form of behaviour helps to link modern industry with the wider social goals of a country. The second part of the study considers how to define and measure the social effects of publicly funded education. The outcome is the use of personal construct theory and repertory grid technique, borrowed from clinical psychology. which help to examine the social responsibility of Indian managers. The theory states that man makes choices and decisions based on the way he construes the world around him and the way he anticipates future events. The implication is that managers who construe social responsibility in terms of socio economic development are likely to make decisions which are more beneficial to society than those who have a narrower view of socially responsible behaviour. The third part of the study reports on the findings of the study, which has used five separate instruments with 53 Indian managers who have been trained at one of the three established Indian Institutes of Management. These Institutes (IIMs) train around 500 graduate managers each year and one of their objectives, is to "inculcate" social values in the graduates so that their future decisions as managers will be made in this context and be relevant to India's needs. The graduates are from among India's social elite and the way they construe social responsibility has been compared to a matched group of managers who have not been through the IIMs. Data has been collected, to classify the managers, on the social origins, their place of work and career orientations. The way they construe corporate and managerial social responsibility was elicited through the use of repertory grid technique, in order to examine the question of social responsibility in as many different ways as possible. Interestingly the results indicate insignificant differences between the two groups. These are interesting results as they highlight the possibility that the IIMs have not managed to instill socially responsible constructs which are any different from other Indian managers. Although this study is a snap-shot view of Indian managers, it does point to an area of research which the IIMs might take up, for example the objective of instilling social responsibility might not be achievable given all the other aims of the Institutions, or, if they feel that being of social consequence is important they might review their entry requirements, operational focus and so on. The main contribution of the results, to this issue, is a new approach to evaluating management education, helping to break from the conventional social cost benefit methods. This study has two further contributions of particular interest. First, it has examined social responsibility in a novel way and provided an empirically based definition. Secondly, the method used for this research has extended the application of personal construct theory to new areas of study, particularly by embodying repertory grid technique. There is little literature in construct theory which is of relevance to management education and this study has helped to close this gap.
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Paharia ethnohistory and the archaeology of the Rajmahal HillsPratap, Ajay January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
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Contested notions of sovereignty in Bengal under British rule, 1765-1785Travers, Thomas Robert January 2001 (has links)
No description available.
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Colonialism and the transformation of matriliny in Malabar, 1850-1940Arunima, G. January 1992 (has links)
No description available.
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Cross-cultural conflict analysis : the 'reality' of the British victory in the second Anglo-Maratha war, 1803-1805Cooper, Randolf G. S. January 1992 (has links)
No description available.
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On religion and renunciation : the case of the Raikas of western RajasthanSrivastava, Vinay Kumar January 1993 (has links)
No description available.
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The making of a Jat identity in the southeast Punjab, circa 1880-1936Datta, Nonica January 1994 (has links)
No description available.
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The Governor-Generalship of the Marquess of Hastings, 1813-1823, with special reference to the Supreme Council and Secretariat, the Residents with native states, military policy, and the transactions of the Palmer CompanyBingle, Richard John January 1965 (has links)
No description available.
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Educational journeys and everyday aspirations : making of 'kamil momina' in a girls' madrasaBorker, Hem January 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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