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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Washington, D.C. :National Academies Press,
    Keywords: Environmental indicators. ; Environmental management-Evaluation. ; Environmental monitoring-Methodology. ; Nature-Effect of human beings on-Evaluation. ; Electronic books.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (308 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9780309522335
    DDC: 363.7/063
    Language: English
    Note: Front Matter -- Preface -- Contents -- Overview: Measures of Environmental Performance and Ecosystem Condition -- Net Energy Expenditure: A Method for Assessing the Environmental Impact of Technologies -- Life-Cycle Analysis: The Role of Evaluation and Strategy -- Defining the Environmentally Responsible Facility* -- Measuring Pollution-Prevention Performance -- Accounting for Natural Resources in Income and Productivity Measurements -- Environmental Performance Standards for Farming and Ranching -- Use of Materials Balances to Estimate Aggregate Waste Generation in the United States -- National Material Metrics for Industrial Ecology* -- Information for Managers -- Environmental Measures: Developing an Environmental Decision-Support Structure -- A Critique of Effluent Bioassays -- Insights from Ambient Toxicity Testing -- Measuring Environmental Performance through Comprehensive River Studies -- Biological Criteria for Water Resource Management -- TVA's Approach to Ecological Health Assessment in Streams and Reservoirs -- Biographical Data -- Index.
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  • 2
    Keywords: Forschungsbericht ; Lignocellulose ; Fraktionierung ; Mehrstufenprozess ; Prozessentwicklung ; Aufschluss ; Hydrolyse ; Bioraffinerie
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (45 Seiten, 1,61 MB) , Illustrationen, Diagramme
    Language: German
    Note: Förderkennzeichen BMBF 031A070 A-B. - Verbund-Nummer 01137026 , Autoren dem Berichtsblatt entnommen , Unterschiede zwischen dem gedruckten Dokument und der elektronischen Ressource können nicht ausgeschlossen werden , Zusammenfassung in deutscher Sprache
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  • 3
    Keywords: Forschungsbericht
    Description / Table of Contents: SECM, Bi-Potentiostat, intelligent software
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: Online-Ressource (20 p., 692 Kb.) , ill., graphs
    Edition: [Elektronische Ressource]
    Language: German
    Note: Differences between the printed and electronic version of the document are possible. - Contract BMBF 13 N 7416/0 , Engl. abstract under title: Development and characterization of a high resolution SECM, part: high sensitive amplifier with intelligent software for SECM , Also available as printed version , Systemvoraussetzungen: Acrobat Reader.
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  • 4
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Washington, D.C. :National Academies Press,
    Keywords: Electronic books.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (221 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9780309596473
    Language: English
    Note: Engineering Within Ecological Constraints -- Copyright -- Preface -- Contents -- Overview and Perspectives -- PROBLEM DEFINITION -- UNCERTAINTY -- APPROACHES TO ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL: LESSONS FROM RESOURCE MANAGEMENT EFFORTS -- SHORT-TERM SOLUTIONS THAT AGGRAVATE LONG-TERM PROBLEMS -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- NOTES -- REFERENCES -- PERSPECTIVES ON ECOLOGY AND ENGINEERING -- Determining the Balance Between Technological and Ecosystem Services -- ECOSYSTEM SERVICES: A MATTER OF PERCEPTION -- WHAT QUALIFIES AS AN ECOSYSTEM SERVICE? -- ECOSYSTEM HEALTH AND THE PROVISION OF ECOSYSTEM SERVICES -- COMMUNICATING THE LINKAGES BETWEEN NATURAL SYSTEMS AND HUMAN WELL-BEING -- MANAGED COEVOLUTION -- BALANCING TECHNOLOGICAL AND NATURAL SERVICES -- PATH FORWARD -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- NOTE -- REFERENCES -- Engineering Resilience versus Ecological Resilience -- ECOSYSTEM STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION -- THE TWO FACES OF RESILIENCE -- MANAGING FOR ENGINEERING RESILIENCE -- MANAGING FOR ECOLOGICAL RESILIENCE -- CONCLUSION -- REFERENCES -- A Scalar Approach to Ecological Constraints -- ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEMS IN PERSPECTIVE -- ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEMS AS SCALAR PROBLEMS -- HOLLING'S WORLD -- ARE HUMAN VALUES SCALED? -- A METAMODEL FOR DECISION MAKING IN A DISCONTINUOUS AND UNCERTAIN WORLD -- NOTES -- REFERENCES -- A Perspective on the Relationship Between Engineering and Ecology -- NEW AWARENESS -- PRINCIPLES FOR ENGINEERING WITHIN ECOLOGICAL CONSTRAINTS -- AN EXAMPLE: TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS -- COMPLEXITY -- DISCUSSION -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- NOTE -- REFERENCES -- Designing Sustainable Ecological Economic Systems -- DEFINING SUSTAINABILITY -- ECOSYSTEMS AS SUSTAINABLE, NONPOLLUTING PRODUCERS -- The Role of Diversity and Organization -- Energy, Entropy, Organization, and Embodied Energy -- PROBLEMS AND CONSTRAINTS OF ECONOMIC EVOLUTION -- Social Traps. , The Importance of Uncertainty and How to Deal with It -- TOWARD A SUSTAINABLE, NONPOLLUTING ECOLOGICAL ECONOMIC SYSTEM -- INNOVATIVE INSTRUMENTS FOR ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT -- CONCLUSIONS -- NOTES -- REFERENCES -- Ecological Integrity and Ecological Health Are Not the Same -- THE FOLLY OF THE STATUS QUO -- GROWING ENVIRONMENTAL CONCERNS -- THE PROBLEM OF BIOTIC IMPOVERISHMENT -- ECOLOGICAL INTEGRITY AND ECOLOGICAL HEALTH -- MEASURING HEALTH AND INTEGRITY -- DEVELOPING INTEGRATED SOLUTIONS -- BRINGING ENGINEERS AND ECOLOGISTS TOGETHER -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- REFERENCES -- Ecological Engineering: A New Paradigm for Engineers and Ecologists -- A NEW COLLABORATION -- DEVELOPMENT AND DEFINITION OF ECOLOGICAL ENGINEERING -- Ecological Engineering as an Extension of Ecology -- Definition and Goals -- History of Ecological Engineering -- PRINCIPLES IN ECOLOGICAL ENGINEERING -- Self-design -- The Acid Test -- A Synthesis, not Reductionism -- Nonrenewable Resource Conservation -- Ecosystem Conservation -- COMPARISONS WITH EXISTING FIELDS -- Environmental Engineering -- Biotechnology -- Restoration Fields -- CLASSIFICATIONS OF ECOLOGICALITY ENGINEERED SYSTEMS -- Classification According to Function -- Classification According to Structure -- IMPORTANCE TO ECOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT -- Short- and Long-Term Impact of Ecological Engineering -- Recent Developments -- CONCLUSIONS -- REFERENCES -- Why Aren't All Engineers Ecologists? -- ECOLOGY AND ENGINEERING -- ENGINEERING STUDENTS AND ECOLOGY -- ENGINEERING AND ECOLOGICAL SYSTEMS -- ENGINEERING AND POLITICS -- TOWARD A SYNTHESIS -- NOTES -- REFERENCES -- CASE STUDIES -- Engineering for Development in Environmentally Sensitive Areas: Oil Operations in a Rain Forest -- THE DILEMMA OF DEVELOPMENT IN NATURAL HABITATS -- DEVELOPMENT THAT PRESERVES ECOLOGICAL INTEGRITY. , ENVIRONMENTAL PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT PROCESS -- OIL DEVELOPMENT IN AN ECUADOR RAIN FOREST -- Major Environmental and Social Issues -- ARCO Project -- Exploration Phase -- Environmental and Social Strategies -- Lumber Harvesting and Transport -- Construction and Heavy Equipment -- Reclamation -- Social Issues -- Development Phase -- Conventional Technology and Approaches -- Environmentally Based Technology -- The Offshore Model -- Refining the Offshore Model -- Production Processing Technology -- Costs -- Pipeline Options -- Pipeline Monitoring and Maintenance -- Selecting an Approach -- Current Status of Environmental Planning and Management -- SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING NEEDS -- MOVING TOWARD SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT -- DISCUSSION -- REFERENCES -- Lessons in Water Resource and Ecosystem Regulation from Florida's Everglades and California's Bay/Delta Estuary -- THE VALUE OF NEGOTIATED FLEXIBILITY -- SIMILARITIES BETWEEN THE EVERGLADES AND THE BAY/DELTA -- Florida's Everglades -- The San Francisco Bay/Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta -- THE EVERGLADES CONTROVERSY -- The Role of the South Florida Water Management District -- Alternative Dispute Resolution -- Iterative Testing Process -- Litigation Developments -- Recent Developments -- Lessons from the Everglades Controversy -- THE BAY/DELTA CRISIS -- EPA's Proposed Standards -- The Urban Alternative -- Long-Term Solutions -- CONCLUSION -- Notes -- REFERENCES -- Engineering Studies Based on Ecological Criteria -- GOALS IN RIVER ENGINEERING -- ALTERNATIVE OBJECTIVES -- Kissimmee River Restoration Studies -- Niobrara Whooping Crane Studies -- FUTURE NEEDS -- REFERENCES -- ''Do No Harm'': A New Philosophy for Reconciling Engineering and Ecology -- THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI RIVER AND ILLINOIS WATERWAY SYSTEM -- OPPOSING PHILOSOPHIES -- Engineering Production Philosophy -- Conservation Philosophy. , UPPER MISSISSIPPI RIVER NAVIGATION STUDIES -- ASSESSING FUTURE EFFECTS: A CLASH OF PHILOSOPHIES -- CONCLUSION -- NOTES -- REFERENCES -- Biographical Data -- INDEX.
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  • 5
    Keywords: Hochschulschrift ; Heime Frontfjella ; Gesteinsbildung ; Metamorphes Gestein
    Type of Medium: Book
    Pages: VII, 321 S. , Ill., graph. Darst.
    Series Statement: Berichte zur Polarforschung 117
    RVK:
    Language: German
    Note: Zsfassung in engl. Sprache , Teilw. zugl.: Bremen, Univ., Diss., 1992
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  • 6
    Keywords: Forschungsbericht ; Glasherstellung ; Leuchtröhre
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: Online-Ressource (7 S., 7,20 MB) , Ill., graph. Darst.
    Language: German
    Note: Förderkennzeichen BMBF 03I314C [falsch] - 03I0314C [richtig]. - Verbund-Nr. 01036027 , Unterschiede zwischen der elektronischen Ressource und dem gedruckten Dokument können nicht ausgeschlossen werden , Auch als gedr. Ausg. vorhanden , Systemvoraussetzungen: Acrobat reader.
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  • 7
    Keywords: Arts, Brazilian--20th century ; Electronic books
    Description / Table of Contents: Cover Strategien ›kultureller Kannibalisierung‹ Postcolonial Studies -- Inhalt -- I. Einleitung -- II. Verschränkungen und Brüche:(post-)koloniale Entwicklungslinien -- II.1 Nord-Süd-Gefälle in den ›postcolonial studies‹ -- II.2 Zwischen ›Dritter Welt‹ und ›Third Space‹ -- II.3 Anti-Kolonialismus, »Ästhetik des Hungers« und militantes Kino -- II.4 Tropicalismo: die postkoloniale Wende in der brasilianischen Kunst -- III. ›Kulturelle Kannibalisierung‹ als postkoloniale Strategie -- III.1 Modernismo: internationalistische Nationalkunst -- III.2 Postkoloniale Resignifizierung: Poesia Pau-Brasil -- III.3 Das Manifesto Antropófago und die europäischen Avantgarden -- III.4 Kannibalismus im kolonialen Diskurs -- III.5 Filiação: Abstammung als Verknüpfung -- III.6 Indianismo: nationaler Ursprungsmythos und seine Dekonstruktion -- III.7 Katechese und Karneval: von der Angleichung zum Entgleiten des Anderen -- III.8 Revisionen der brasilianischen Geschichte -- III.9 Vermischung und Abgrenzung:antropofagia versus Verde-Amarelo -- III.10 Reduktionistische Lesarten des Manifesto Antropófago -- III.11 Kulturspezifische Konzept-Metapher und postkoloniale Denkfigur -- IV. Der Tropicalismo als Neo-Antropofagismo -- IV.1 Brasilidade jenseits von Nationalismus und (neo-)kolonialer Kultur -- IV.2 Filmische Strategien ›kultureller Kannibalisierung‹ -- IV. 2.1. O dragão da maldade contra o santo guerreiro von Glauber Rocha -- IV. 2.1.1 Lampião, São Jorge und der Drache des Bösen -- IV. 2.1.2 Dekonstruktion des »amerikanischen Kinos par excellence« -- IV. 2.1.3 Der cangaço im nordestern -- IV. 2.1.4 Traditionen der Gewalt im Sertão -- IV. 2.1.5 Ein tropikalistischer Showdown -- IV. 2.2 Macunaíma von Joaquim Pedro de Andrade -- IV. 2.2.1 Eine Parade für die Helden Brasiliens -- IV. 2.2.2 Macunaíma im Medienwechsel -- IV. 2.2.3 Rassen-Diskurs »in unreiner Rede«.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (277 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9783839424766
    Series Statement: Postcolonial Studies v.16
    DDC: 700.98099999999999
    Language: German
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2023-03-16
    Description: The geological overview map was compiled from 15 geological maps (1 : 25,000) and is based on Jacobs et al. 1996. The topographic basemaps were adapted from unpublished 1:250,000 provisional topographic maps, Institut f. Angewandte Geodäsie, Frankfurt, 1983. Part of the contour lines are from Radarsat (Liu et al. 2001).
    Keywords: Glaciers Austria; Heimefrontfjella; Heimefrontfjella, Antarctica
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/pdf, 919.1 kBytes
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  • 9
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    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Barrett, Peter J; Sarti, Massimo; Wise, Sherwood W (2000): Studies from the Cape Roberts Project, Ross Sea, Antarctica, Initial Reports on CRP-3. Terra Antartica, 7(1/2), 209 pp, hdl:10013/epic.28287.d001
    Publication Date: 2024-04-29
    Description: The site for CRP-3, 12 km east of Cape Roberts (77.006°S; 103.719°E)was selecte to overlap the lower Oligocene strata cored in nearby CRP-2/2A, and to sample the oldest strata in the Victoria Land Basin (VLB) for Paleogene climatic and tectonic history. As it transpired there was underlap of the order of 10s of metres. CRP-3 was cored from 3 to 939 mbsf (metres below the sea floor), with a core recovery of 97%. Coring took place from October 9 to November 19, 1999, on 2.0 to 2.2 m of sea ice and through 295 in of water. The Cenozoic strata cored were mostly g1acially influenced marine sediments of early Oligocene age, though they may be earliest Eocene near the base, where at 823 mbsf Devonian Beacon sandstone was encountered. Following CRP-1 and CRP-2/2A, CRP-3 completes the coring of 1500 m of strata on the western margin of the VLB. Core fractures and other physical properties, such as sonic velocity, density and magnetic susceptibility, were measured throughout the core. Down-hole logs for these and other properties were taken from 20 down to 900-919 mbsf. Also, vertical seismic profile data were gathered from shots offset both along strike and up dip from the hole. Sonic velocities in CRP-3 are close to 2.0 km/s in the upper 80 m, but become significantly faster below 95 mbsf, averaging 3.2+0.6 km/s to the bottom of the hole. An exception to this is an interval of dolerite conglomerate from 790 to c. 820 mbsf with a velocity of c. 4.5 km/s. Dip of the strata also increases down-hole from 10° in the upper 100 m to around 22° at the bottom. Over 3000 fractures were logged through the hole, and borehole televiewer imagery was obtained for most of the hole for orienting core and future stress field analysis. Two high-angle crush zones, interpreted as faults, were encountered at c. 260 and c. 540 mbsf, but no stratigraphic displacement could be recognised. A third fault zone is inferred from a low angle shear zone in the upper part of a coarse dolerite conglomerate from 790 to 805 mbsf. Temperature gradient was found to be 28.5°.km-1. Basement strata cored from 823 mbsf to the bottom of the hole are largely light-reddish brown medium-grained sandstone (quartz-cemented quartzarenite) with abundant well-defined parallel lamination. These features are comparable with the middle Devonian part of the Beacon Supergroup, possibly the Arena Sandstone. This interval also includes a body of intrusive rock from 901 to 920 mbsf. It has brecciated contacts and is highly altered but some tholeiitic affinity can be recognised in the trace element chemistry. Its age is unknown. Post-Beacon sedimentation began on deeply eroded quartzarenite with the deposition of a thin sandstone breccia and conglomerate, probably as terrestrial talus, followed by dolerite conglomerate and minor sandstone of probable fluvial origin to 790 mbsf. Sedimentation continued in a marine setting, initially sandstone and conglomerate, but above c. 330 mbsf the strata include mudstone and diamictite also. The older sandstone and conglomerate beds are seen as the products of rapid episodic sedimentation. They are interpreted by some as the product of glaciofluvial discharge into shallow coastal waters, and others as a result of sediment gravity flows, perhaps glacially sourced, into deeper water. The core above c. 330 mbsf has facies that allow the recognition of cyclic sequences similar to those in CRP-2A. Fourteen unconformity-bounded sequences have been recognised from 330 mbsf to the sea floor, and are interpreted in terms of glacial advance and retreat, and sea level fall and rise. Detailed lithological descriptions on a scale of 1 :20 are presented for the full length of the core, along with core box images, as a 300 page supplement to this issue. The strata cored by CRP-3 are for the most part poorly fossiliferous, perhaps as a consequence of high sedimentation rates. Nevertheless the upper 200 m includes several siliceous microfossil- and calcareous nannoplankton-bearing intervals. Siliceous microfossils, including diatoms, ebrideans, chrysophycean cysts and silicoflagellates are abundant and well-preserved in the upper 67 m - below this level samples are barren or poorly preserved, but contain residual floras that indicate assemblages were once rich. No siliceous microfossils were found below 193 mbsf. Calcareous nannofossil have a similar distribution but are generally well preserved. Foraminifera, marine and terrestrial palynomorphs, and marine macrofossils were found consistentlsy down to c. 330 mbsf and sporadically to 525 mbsf. The taxa suggest marine deposition in water depth of c. 50 to 120 m. Below 525 mbsf no microfossils were found, apart from mudstone with similar marine and terrestrial palynomorphs at 781 mbsf, and rare miospores in the conglomerate below 790 mbsf. The terrestrial miospore record, which include several species of Nothofagus and podocarpaceous conifers, suggest low diversity woody vegetation, implying a cold temperate to periglacial climate for the hinterland throughout the period recorded by CRP-3. Important components of the warmer Eocene flora, known from erratics in southern McMurdo Sound, are missing, through the dominance of smectite in clay from strata below 650 mbsf suggests that the landscape prior to the timne of deposition had experienced a more temperate weathering regime. Biostratigraphy for ihe upper part of CRP-3 is provided by diatoms and calcareous nannofossils. The first appearance of Cavitatus jouseanus at 48 mbsf suggests an age of arround 31 Ma for this horizon. The last appearance of Transverspontis pulcheroides at 114 mbsf in an interval of relatively high abundance indicates a reasonably sound age for this horizon at 32.5 ± 0.5 Ma. The absence of particular resistant diatoms that are older than 33 Ma supports an age that is younger than this for the upper 200 m of CRP-3. Marine palynomorphs, which occur sporadically down to 525 mbsf and in a single occurrence at 781 inbsf, have biostratigraphical potential once the many new species in this and other CRP cores are described, and F0 and LO datums established. The mudstone at 781 mbsf has a new clinocyst species, rare Lejeunecysta cysts and a variety of acritarchs and prasinophytes, a varied marine assemblage that is quite different from and presumably younger than the well known Transantarctic Flora of mid to late Eocene age. On this basis and for the moment we conclude that the oldest strata in CRP-3 are earliest Oligocene (or possibly latest Eocene) in age - c. 34 Ma. Over 1l00 samples were taken for magnetic studies. Four magnetozones were recognisd on the basis of NRM intensity and magnetic susceptibility, reflecting the change in sediment composition between quartz sand-dominated and dolerite-dominated. For this report there was time only to produce a magnetostratigraphy for the upper 350 m. This interval is largely of reversed polarity (5 normal intervals total 50 of the 350 m), in contrast to the dominantly normal polarities of CRP-2/2A, and is inferred to be Chron C12R. This extends from 30.9 to 33 Ma. consistent with the biostratigraphic datums from the upper part of CRP-3. The lower limit of reversed polarity has yet to be established. The short period normal events are of interest as they may represent cryptochrons or even polarity changes not recognised in the Geomagnetic Polarity Time Scale. Erosion of the adjacent Transantarctic Mountains through the Kirkpatrick Basalt (Jurassic tholeiitic flows) and dolerite-intruded Beacon Supergroup (Devonian-Triassic sandstone) into granitic basement beneath is recorded by petrographical studies of clast and sand grain assemblages from CRP-3. The clasts in the lower 30 m of the Cenozoic section are almost entirely dolerite apart from a few blocks from the Beacon Supergroup beneath. Above this, however, both dolerite and granitoids are ubiquitous, the latter indicating that erosion had reached down to granitic basement even as the first sediment was accumulating in the VLB. No clasts or sand grains of the McMurdo Volcanic Group were found, but rare silt-size brown volcanic glass occurs in smear slides through most of CRP-3, and is interpreted as distal air fall from alkaline volcanism in northern Victoria Land. Jurassic basalt occurs as clasts sporadically throughout the sequence: in the sand fraction they decline upwards in abundance. The influence of the Devonian Beacon Supergroup is most striking for the interval from 600 to 200 mbsf, where quartz grains, from 10 to 50% of them rounded, dominate the sand fraction. Laminae of coal granules from the overlying Permian coal measures in all but the upper 150 in of the CRP-3 sequence show that these also were being eroded actively at this time. CRP-3 core completed the stratigraphical sampling of the western margin of the VLB by not only coring the oldest strata (Seismic Unit V5) but also the basin floor beneath. This has several important tectonic implications: - most of the Kirkpatrick Basalt and the Beacon Supergroup with the sills of Ferrar Dolerite have been eroded by the time down-faulting displaced the Beacon to form the basin floor. - matching the Beacon strata at the bottom of CRP-3 with the equivalent strata in the adjacent mountains suggests c. 3000 m of down-to-the-east displacement across the Transantarctic Mountain Front as a consequence of rifting and subsequent tectonic activity. - the age of the oldest Cenozoic strata in CRP-3 (c. 34 Ma), which are also the oldest strata in this section of the VLB, most likely represents the initiation of the rift subsidence of this part of the West Antarctic Rift System. This age for the oldest VLB fill is much younger than previously supposed by several tens of millions of years, but is consistent with newly documented sea floor spreading data immediately north of the northern Victoria Land continental margin. These new data sets will drive a re-evaluation of the relationship between initiation of uplift of the Transantarctic Mountains (currently c.55 Ma) and VLB subsidence.
    Keywords: Cape Roberts Project; Core wireline system; CRP; CRP-3; CWS; Ross Sea; Sampling/drilling from ice
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 7 datasets
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  • 10
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Journal of regional science 27 (1987), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1467-9787
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Geography , Economics
    Notes: . Summarizing the foregoing discussions in this journal on testing for regional homogeneity the present note shows that in the model of Zellner's seemingly unrelated regressions one test statistic may be used not only to test for overall homogeneity but also to examine for individual coefficient homogeneity. This aim is achieved by varying the linear restrictions in the test statistic according to different problems. To illustrate these tests regional consumption functions for the 11 Bundesläder (States) of the Federal Republic of Germany are used.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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