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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

極東ネパールヒマラヤ泥質片麻岩の形成条件

Imayama, Takeshi, 今山, 武志 03 1900 (has links)
第22回名古屋大学年代測定総合研究センターシンポジウム平成21(2009)年度報告
2

Low H2O activity of fluid in mafic granulite in far-eastern Nepal (forecast)

今山, 武志, Imayama, Takeshi 03 1900 (has links)
名古屋大学年代測定総合研究センターシンポジウム報告
3

Systematics of Clematis in Nepal, the evolution of tribe Anemoneae DC (Ranunculaceae) and phylogeography and the dynamics of speciation in the Himalaya

Elliott, Alan Cant January 2016 (has links)
The genus Clematis L. (Ranunculaceae) was used as a new model group to assess the role of the Himalayan orogeny on generation of biodiversity through investigations of its phylogeny, phylogeography and taxonomy. Although existing checklists include 28 species of Clematis from Nepal, a comprehensive taxonomic revision of available material in herbaria and additional sampling from fieldwork during this study has led to the recognition of 21 species of Clematis in Nepal, including one species (C. kilungensis) not previously recorded from Nepal. Exisiting phylogenetic and taxonomic concepts were tested with the addition of new samples from Nepal. The results highlight the shortcomings of the previous studies which were poorly resolved and indicate the need for a thorough revision of the sectional classification. Despite the increased sampling the results are still equivocal due to poor statistical support along the backbone of the phylogeny. Groups of species in well supported terminal clades are broadly comparable with results from previous studies although there are fewer clearly recognisable and well supported clades. The published dates for the evolution of Clematis were tested and the methodology of the previous study critically reappraised. The results indicate that the genus Clematis is approximately twice as old as previously reported and evolved in the middle Miocene. The phylogeny also demonstrates that, even allowing for poor support for the relationships between groups of species within Clematis, the extant Nepalese species must have multiple independent origins from at least 6 different colonisations. With their occurrence in the Pliocene and Pleistocene, these events are relatively recent in relation to the Himalayan orogeny, and may be linked more to the dispersal ability of Clematis than to the direct effects of the orogeny. Additional Nepalese samples of Koenigia and Meconopsis were added to exisiting datasets and these were reanalysed. The result from Clematis, Koenigia and Meconopsis were appraised in light of the the geocientific literature and previously published phylogeographic studies to create an overview of the drivers behind speciation in the Himalaya.
4

Protected areas and socio-environmental justice : the case for participatory protected area management

Furze, Brian James, 1957- January 2002 (has links)
Abstract not available
5

Global Localism at the Manaslu Conservation Area in the Eastern Himalaya, Nepal: Integrating Forest Ecological and Ethnobotanical Knowledge for Biodiversity conservation

Shrestha, Sushma 04 December 2013 (has links)
No description available.
6

Zur Vergletscherungsgeschichte des Rolwaling Himal und des Kangchenjunga Himal (Nepal, Himalaya Südabdachung) / A contribution to the history of glaciation of Rolwaling Himal and the Kangchenjunga Himal (Nepal, Himalaya)

König, Oliver 12 December 2002 (has links)
No description available.

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