Academic literature on the topic 'Eastern Hillside'

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Journal articles on the topic "Eastern Hillside"

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Morley, T. R., and A. J. K. Calhoun. "Vegetation characteristics of forested hillside seeps in eastern Maine, USA1,2." Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society 136, no. 4 (October 2009): 520–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.3159/08-ra-073.1.

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Shao, Quanxi, Carmen Chan, Huidong Jin, and Simon Barry. "Statistical Justification of Hillside Farm Dam Distribution in Eastern Australia." Water Resources Management 26, no. 11 (June 10, 2012): 3139–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11269-012-0063-8.

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Ortmann-né Ajkai, Adrienne, István Zsolt Tóth, Attila Sirok, Dániel Nagy, Péter Kulcsár, and Kálmán Partos. "Egy ismeretlen „őserdő” a Kelet-Mecsekben: 25 éve felhagyott bükkös aljnövényzetének térbeli mintázatai." Kaposvári Rippl-Rónai Múzeum Közleményei, no. 1 (2013): 65–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.26080/krrmkozl.2013.1.65.

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A 130-years old beech forest stand (Helleboro odo-ri – Fagetum) in Eastern Mecsek hills (Southern Hungary), abandoned 22-25 years ago, provides excellent opportunities for the study of spontaneous forest dynamics. In 2010 intensive studies started, iniciated by Mecsekerdő Zrt: repeating an individuum-based tree-stand survey of 1986-87, and a grid-based herb layer survey according to the Forest Reserve Protocol. In the herb layer 95 species were found, amongst them 14 protected ones, most of them in the hillside-hilltop ecotone. Most important are the more thousand exemplars of Doronicum orientale. More than 30% percentage of specialist and competitor species indicates a very good naturalness state, comparable with forest reserves.
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Miyake, Masahiro, and Kunihiro Narumi. "A Study on the Planning Philosophy of Hillside Residential Area Development of Hill Area in Eastern Nagoya." Journal of the City Planning Institute of Japan 30 (October 25, 1995): 481–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.11361/journalcpij.30.481.

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Beato Bergua, Salvador, Miguel Ángel Poblete Piedrabuena, and José Luis Marino Alfonso. "Snow avalanche susceptibility in the eastern hillside of the Aramo Range (Asturian Central Massif, Cantabrian Mountains, NW Spain)." Journal of Maps 14, no. 2 (June 6, 2018): 373–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17445647.2018.1480974.

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Pes, Ahmed Algouti, Abdellah Algouti Pes, and Fatiha Hadach. "Mise en évidence d’une phase tectonique au Santonien du versant Nord du Haut Atlas Occidental, Maroc." European Scientific Journal, ESJ 12, no. 3 (January 30, 2016): 107. http://dx.doi.org/10.19044/esj.2016.v12n3p107.

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At the level of the north hillside of the western High Atlas, only the training of limestones and dolomitic marls of Aït Abbes was recognized in Senonian. It is topped by the phosphated series. To highlight a tectonic action at the end of lower Santonian of Sidi Bou Othman's region and which is probably due to a halocinique phase, three cuts were been lifted on both sides of the Assif Aït Tabgaw. This tectonic phase appears by angular unconformity within the deposits of the training of Aït Abbes, microfaults, synsedimentary slidings, and monogenic breaches… It also structures the whole region at the high bottom or emergent low lands forming several small basins confined and supersaturated in brines. Then, following an important peneplanation, a platform of sebkha type is set up on the whole region. Some brief marine incursions reach the eastern basins.
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Rivas-Fuenzalida, Tomás Antonio, and Katherine Burgos-Andrade. "PRIMER REGISTRO DE NIDIFICACIÓN Y OTRAS OBSERVACIONES SOBRE EL BÚHO VENTRIBANDEADO (PULSATRIX MELANOTA)." Ornitología Neotropical 33, no. 1 (July 1, 2022): 84–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.58843/ornneo.v33i1.921.

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The Band-bellied Owl (Pulsatrix melanota) is among the least known Neotropical strigiforms, and up to now, no nesting records of the species have been published. In July 2020 in a locality in the eastern foothills of central Peru, an active nest occupied by a single chick and an adult pair of band-bellied owls was found. The nest was located on a small triangular ledge (≈170 cm2) at 6 m high in a forked trunk of a 17 m high and 93,3 cm DBH Albizia carbonaria tree, in a gently sloping hillside of a small ravine at 1290 m a.s.l. The nesting tree was located only at 4 m from a transited road and 40 m from a small village. The habitat in the nest site was dominated by agricultural land. In addition, we describe three other chicks, provide morphometric measurements of an adult and notes on the diet.
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Chaturvedi, Vineet, Monika Kuffer, and Divyani Kohli. "Analysing Urban Development Patterns in a Conflict Zone: A Case Study of Kabul." Remote Sensing 12, no. 21 (November 8, 2020): 3662. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/rs12213662.

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A large part of the population in low-income countries (LICs) lives in fragile and conflict-affected states. Many cities in these states show high growth dynamics, but little is known about the relation of conflicts and urban growth. In Afghanistan, the Taliban regime, which lasted from 1996 to 2001, caused large scale displacement of the population. People from Afghanistan migrated to neighboring countries like Iran and Pakistan, and all developments came to a halt. After the US invasion in October 2001, all the major cities in Afghanistan experienced significant population growth, in particular, driven by the influx of internally displaced persons. Maximum pressure of this influx was felt by the capital city, Kabul. This rapid urbanization, combined with very limited capacity of local authorities to deal with this growth, led to unplanned urbanization and challenges for urban planning and management. This study analyses the patterns of growth between 2001 and 2017, and the factors influencing the growth in the city of Kabul with the help of high-resolution Earth Observation-based data (EO) and spatial logistic regression modelling. We analyze settlement patterns by extracting image features from high-resolution images (aerial photographs of 2017) and terrain features as input to a random forest classifier. The urban growth is analyzed using an available built-up map (extracted from IKONOS images for the year 2001). Results indicate that unplanned settlements have grown 4.5 times during this period, whereas planned settlements have grown only 1.25 times. The unplanned settlements expanded mostly towards the west and north west parts of the city, and the growth of planned settlements happened mainly in the central and eastern parts of the city. Population density and the locations of military bases are the most important factors that influence the growth, of both planned and unplanned settlements. The growth of unplanned settlement occurs predominantly in areas of steeper slopes on the hillside, while planned settlements are on gentle slopes and closer to the institutional areas (central and eastern parts of the city). We conclude that security and availability of infrastructure were the main drivers of growth for planned settlements, whereas unplanned growth, mainly on hillsides, was driven by the availability of land with poor infrastructure.
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FIELDING, W. J., and D. P. SHERCHAN. "The variability of level and sloping terraces in eastern Nepal and the implications for the design of experiments." Experimental Agriculture 35, no. 4 (October 1999): 449–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0014479799354065.

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Nepalese hillside terraces are classified into two broad groups, sloping or bari terraces which are only rainfed, and level or khet terraces which are commonly flood irrigated but may also be rainfed. Although such terraces may be adjacent, the process of irrigation by flooding and puddling changes the pattern of variability both within and between terraces. Data collected from Pakhribas Agricultural Centre, Dhankuta, Nepal, were used to describe this variability. The variability is manifest not only in the soil characteristics of the two terrace types, with khet terraces being more uniform than bari terraces both within and between terraces, but also in the variability of field experiments on the two terrace types. However, both terrace types exhibit similar patterns of variability which influence the design of experiments. These include the following: a gradient between the terrace riser and wall which is generally more important than gradients along the terrace, variability within terraces which can preclude the assumption that plots on the same terrace are similar, and variability between terraces which requires experimental units in the same block to be assigned to the same terrace.
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Marković, Miroslava, Snežana Rajković, and Radoslav Rajković. "Analysis of the impact of injuries caused by the influence of mechanical and abiotic factors on the occurrence of harmful fungal organisms." Sustainable Forestry: Collection, no. 65-66 (2012): 97–109. http://dx.doi.org/10.5937/sustfor1265097m.

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The research described in this paper is focused on the occurrence of pathogenic microorganisms on beech trees relative to the presence of tree injuries, with the aim to ensure protection and preservation of this species in Serbia. The research was conducted in Eastern Serbia, in a hillside beech forest Fagetum moesiacae submontanum of generative origin. The testing was carried out on two sites over 51 testing plots, with a total of 829 trees and 21 species of identified fungi. On the first site it was found that the appearance of fungi primarily depends on the presence of mechanical damage on trees (as much as 73.46%), while the presence of abiotic damage has almost no bearing (only 3.21%). On the second site there was a strong correlation link between the occurrence of fungi and presence of mechanical damage - 51.88%, as well as between the fungi and abiotic damage - 47.96%. The health condition of high beech stands was found to be heavily dependent on careful and proper manipulation during harvesting, while each injury inflicted on a beech live tree during logging opens the door to infection with pathogenic microorganisms.
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Books on the topic "Eastern Hillside"

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Fiez, Timothy Edward. An evaluation of site-specific crop management in the Palouse Region of eastern Washington. 1995.

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Book chapters on the topic "Eastern Hillside"

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Kimbel, William H., Yoel Rak, Donald C. Johanson, Ralph L. Holloway, and Michael S. Yuan. "Recovery and Reconstruction of A.L. 444-2." In The Skull of Australopithecus afarensis. Oxford University Press, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195157062.003.0005.

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The A.L. 444-2 skull was found on 26 February 1992, during a strategic paleontological survey of Kada Hadar Member sediments that are stratigraphically situated between BKT-1 and BKT-2 tephras, on the eastern edge of the Awash River’s Kada Hadar tributary. Yoel Rak discovered two fragments of hominin occipital bone (A.L. 444-1) at the base of a steep hill composed of Kada Hadar Member silts and clays capped by a weathered sandstone remnant. Subsequent examination of the upslope surface revealed additional hominin skull fragments (the temporal bones and maxillae) clustered together and partially exposed in a narrow gully that dissected the face of the hill. During the next seven days, probing and dry sieving of the gully infill and hillside colluvium over a 77 m2 area led to the recovery of fragments representing about 75%–80% of a single hominin skull. It was immediately apparent that the upslope finds duplicated the anatomical parts represented by the two A.L. 444-1 occipital fragments and therefore constituted a second hominin individual, cataloged as A.L. 444-2. In addition, the lambdoidal suture of the A.L. 444-1 occipital is completely unfused, suggesting subadult status, whereas fused cranial sutures and extreme dental occlusal wear indicate an advanced ontogenetic age for A.L. 444-2. In February–March 1993 the A.L. 444 hillside was excavated in an effort to locate missing parts of the A.L. 444-2 skull and to determine its precise stratigraphic provenance. No further remains of the hominin skull were encountered in situ, but a complete viverrid cranium and indeterminate fragments of large mammal bone with preservation and patina (mottled dark gray, white, and yellowish gray) identical to those of the hominin were excavated in an unstratified, cemented carbonate silt that exactly matches the matrix adhering to A.L. 444-2. We are confident that the hominin skull is from this sedimentary horizon. It is approximately 10.5 m stratigraphically below the BKT-2 tephra, which outcrops in the immediate vicinity of A.L. 444 Single-crystal laser fusion (SCLF) 40Ar/39Ar ages for BKT-2 and Kada Hadar Tuff (KHT) bracket the geological age of A.L. 444-2 between 2.94 and 3.18 Myr (Kimbel et al., 1994; Walter, 1994; Semaw et al., 1997).
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Wang, Xiaoxuan. "Conclusion." In Maoism and Grassroots Religion, 179–90. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190069384.003.0009.

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When travelers today go from downtown Wenzhou to Rui’an, the first things they see along the newly built Yong-Tai-Wen highway are stretches of paddy fields; small, winding rivers, and lush, low hills in the distance. Next to appear are traditional Chinese buildings dotting hillsides and fields, too bright to miss. Some of them have yellow-painted walls and grey tile roofs. Others are adorned with colorful motifs, statuettes of various kinds displayed in cornices, and occasionally flags of various colors on the rooftops. The yellow buildings are easily recognizable as Buddhist temples, while the colorful buildings are temples for territorial religion. Most of them look fairly new. Careful observers will also notice many newly built Christian churches in a variety of styles, some recognizable, others harder to identify, dispersed in the plains along the highway. These are views the northern soldiers would not have seen on their way to Rui’an in the summer of 1949, when the Communist Party’s Eastern China Field Army came south to Wenzhou to take over the region from local Communist guerrillas....
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