Academic literature on the topic 'Phillipines'

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Journal articles on the topic "Phillipines":

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Espenilla, Jacqueline Joyce F. "Phillipines." Asia-Pacific Journal of Ocean Law and Policy 4, no. 1 (June 19, 2019): 97–102. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/24519391-00401008.

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Easton, Adam. "Cholera in Phillipines." Lancet 349, no. 9065 (May 1997): 1612. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736(05)61655-8.

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J.D.R. "Franciscans in the Phillipines." Americas 44, no. 2 (October 1987): 238–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003161500073971.

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Thom, Allan R. "How Did We Get Here ?" APOS Trends in Orthodontics 8 (December 1, 2018): 182–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/apos.apos_100_18.

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This is the transcript of the inspirational address delivered by Dr. Allan Thom, President-World Federation of Orthodontists to the Presidents of the APOS Affiliate Societies at the 11th APOC in Boracay, Phillipines in March, 2018.
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&NA;. "Lomotil (Rm) safe and effective in the Phillipines." Reactions Weekly &NA;, no. 420 (September 1992): 3. http://dx.doi.org/10.2165/00128415-199204200-00003.

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Aragones, LV. "Observations on dugongs at Calauit Island, Busuanga, Palawan, Phillipines." Wildlife Research 21, no. 6 (1994): 709. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/wr9940709.

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A simultaneous monitoring system that used a team of local observers to count dugongs around Calauit Island, Busuanga, Palawan, Philippines, from eight vantage points was employed from March 1989 to May 1990 to identify important dugong habitats around the island. On average, five dugongs were seen per survey day. More dugongs were observed during March and July 1989 than in other months. These periods coincided with the bimodal peaking of seagrass biomass in the region and the lull between monsoons for that year. The site where dugongs were most often sighted was about 1.5 m deep, had the largest area of seagrass on the island (approximately 50 ha) and supported a seagrass (above-ground) biomass averaging 1060 g m-2 (wet weight). The dugongs were shy, making observations difficult. They were observed to graze at the study sites once per day, usually starting in the late afternoon or at night. Animals usually stayed on the seaward side of the spur-and-groove sections of the reefs. Short seagrasses such as Halophila ovalis, Halodule uninervis, Cymodocea rotundata, C. serrulata, Syringodium isoetifolium and Thalassia hemprichii showed more evidence of being grazed than the taller Enhalus acoroides. By direct observations of the area grazed by a single dugong, an average consumption rate of 30.5 kg (wet weight) of seagrass (above ground only) per day was estimated. The methodology developed in this study may be used to identify reserve areas for the protection of dugong habitats in the Philippines. The dugong populations of Palawan require further attention and implementation of conservation measures.
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DeGraff, Deborah S., Richard E. Bilsborrow, and Alejandro N. Herrin. "Children's education in the Phillipines: Does high fertility matter?" Population Research and Policy Review 15, no. 3 (June 1996): 219–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf00127050.

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Kim, Jung-Min, Hye-Yeon Lee, Dae-Jin Pakr, Chul-Ho Oak, Man-Joong Jeon, Byeng-Chul Yu, Kwang-Wook Koh, and Yong-Hwan Lee. "Development of Village Health Worker Training Program in Tuguegarao, Phillipines." Journal of agricultural medicine and community health 33, no. 3 (December 20, 2008): 324–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.5393/jamch.2008.33.3.324.

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DA SILVA, ESTEVAM L. CRUZ. "Description of the male of Dendrolycosa cruciata (Roewer, 1955) (Araneae: Pisauridae: Pisaurinae)." Zootaxa 3626, no. 3 (March 14, 2013): 397–400. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3626.3.8.

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The spider genus Dendrolycosa Doleschall, 1859 was recently revised by Jäger (2011), who described four new species and now comprises 15 known species found from Tanzania to Phillipines and south to New Caledonia (Platnick 2012). Ten of the 15 Dendrolycosa species are known only from females and two only from males. In the present paper, the male of Dendrolycosa cruciata (Roewer, 1955) is described and illustrated for the first time.
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Bautista, Dennis M., Charles S. Abanilla, Ariel E. Matillano, and Allan M. Abiera. "PINTAKASI: A UNIFYING FACTOR IN A LOCAL VILLAGE IN THE PHILLIPINES." International Journal of Research -GRANTHAALAYAH 5, no. 12 (June 29, 2020): 53–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.29121/granthaalayah.v5.i12.2017.473.

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This is a case study conducted in one of the rural barangays of Leyte. Anchored on the theory of collective effervescence, this study delved into an understanding of a long ago practiced tradition that still thrives even in present times. In synergy, these rural folks enthusiastically come together to solve a problem of any member of the community. Thus, this study has two major concerns: first is to investigate how and why the “pintakasi or bayanihan” spirit of the past still evident today; and second, to rediscover which aspect of the “pintakasi or bayanihan” spirit and the ancient Filipino value hold true in contemporary times. Such queries were answered using a qualitative research approach specifically the ethnographic method in gathering data coupled with a face-to-face interview with ten (10) respondents who were the community officials and elders of this said barangay to discover their social activities and values. As revealed in this study, the rural folks continuously observed the practice because it is innate to them to help especially those in need.

Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Phillipines":

1

Habulan, Antonio Atanacio A. "Acquisition planning for the Armed Forces of the Phillipines (AFP) modernization program /." Monterey, Calif. : Springfield, Va. : Naval Postgraduate School ; Available from National Technical Information Service, 2002. http://library.nps.navy.mil/uhtbin/hyperion-image/02Dec%5FHabulan.pdf.

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Tondo, Josefina Socorro Flores. "Transnational Migration, Diaspora and Religion: Inscribing Identity through the Sacred (the Filipino Diaspora in New Zealand and Singapore)." Thesis, University of Canterbury. Social and Political Sciences, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10092/9241.

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The thesis is an anthropological exploration of the role of religion in Filipino transnational migration and diaspora. The thesis takes the interpretive approach, drawing from a variety of disciplines such as religious studies, sociology, and geography to frame a holistic view of religion as a “lived” experience that connects religious dispositions, symbols and ritual performance to the diaspora’s place-making and home-making. It weaves together anthropology’s conceptual strands of space, place, symbols and ritual to present a view of Filipino migrant sociality and personhood not as constituted by disparate fragmented experiences but as as a tapestry of woven symbols and meanings that shape their diasporic life, even as they themselves continuously shape their own experiences. The thesis’ ethnography is based on participant observation among Filipino migrants between 2007 and 2010 in New Zealand and Singapore. It focuses on the celebration of the Santacruzan and Santo Niño-Sinulog fiesta in New Zealand and Simbang Gabi novena masses in Singapore to examine how Filipino cultural forms of expression connect and mix with notions of homeland, family, home, sacred domain and identity as these have been adapted, recreated, and spatially inscribed in their transnational journeys. 6 The ethnography examines the interplay and connection between Filipino folk religiosity, family and social networks. It looks at how the deeply held folk Christian notions of kapalaran (destiny), swerte (luck), bahala na (whatever God allows will happen /come what may God will take care) and imagery of may awa ang Diyos (a compassionate God) are enmeshed in the migrant exercise of agency, reflexive discourse, risk-taking, resilience and meaningmaking in the diaspora. It demonstrates that among Filipino migrants, material and communication flows are manifestations of religious dispositions that support enduring family commitment and reciprocity. It shows that financial and social capital provided by families and social networks for migrants are supported by prayers for sacred assistance and blessings, indicating that the Filipino migrants’ exercise of agency is familial and sacral rather than individual and secular. As a dominant Philippine lowland tradition, the fiesta is the locus of sacralmaterial linkages constituted by Filipino home symbols, such as sacred icons, costumes, cultural performance, semantic expressions, and food. By examining the fiesta, its organisation and structure of power relations, the thesis explores the metaphoric parallels and symbolic articulations between two homes in migrants’ diasporic consciousness, and the significant role of sacred symbols in aiding and facilitating the maintenance and inscription of ‘Filipino’ identity in a foreign land. Diaspora identity is a socially and spatially inscribed identity. For Filipinos, it is inscribed through sacred icons and fiesta celebrations in sacred sites.
3

Jung, Wolfgang E. W. "Contextualization in the Old and New Testament and its application to Muslim evangelism in the Phillipines." Theological Research Exchange Network (TREN), 1993. http://www.tren.com.

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Facun-Granadozo, Ruth, Abidah Abutaeb, Bolatito Alaofin, and Lydia Kwaitoo. "Perspective- Taking: the Joys, Challenges, and Hopes of Early Childhood Education in Four Countries (Ghana, Nigeria, the Philippines, and Kingdom of Saudi Arabia)." Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University, 2018. https://dc.etsu.edu/etsu-works/4324.

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Clarke, Gerard. "Participation and protest : non-governmental organisations and Phillipine politics." Thesis, SOAS, University of London, 1995. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.319901.

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Molete, Ruth Phillipine. "The influence of commissions of inquiry in the evolution of educational policy for blacks, from 1934-1984 / Ruth Phillipine Molete." Thesis, Potchefstroom University for Christian Higher Education, 1995. http://hdl.handle.net/10394/10225.

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Absuelo, Ruby. "Employability of Philippine college and university graduates in the United States." Thesis, Edith Cowan University, Research Online, Perth, Western Australia, 2014. https://ro.ecu.edu.au/theses/868.

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Limited economic opportunity for many Filipinos has created substantial emigration of the country’s educated work force. The economic opportunities in the United States have attracted Philippine immigrants seeking employment opportunities. Thus, the U.S. now has a substantial foreign-born Filipino population. Although the majority of Philippine immigrants to the U.S. possess bachelor’s degrees or advanced degrees (Allard & Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2011; Camarota, 2012; Commission on Filipinos Overseas, 2012), many are underemployed or work in fields relatively unrelated to their education and experience. This thesis examines Philippine college and university graduates’ social networks, educational attainment, degree field, English language proficiency, immigration status, age, and gender, factors which influence and determine Philippine graduates’ employability in the U.S. labour market. The Triangulation Mixed Methods Design also known as the Concurrent Triangulation Design was employed to effectively measure the complex phenomenon of Philippine graduates’ employability by integrating quantitative and qualitative data sets. The null hypotheses for this thesis were rejected exclusive of age and gender differences. Data revealed employability was enhanced when Philippine graduates networked with Weak Ties during initial employment and continued to be advantageous for being adequately employed (i.e. resulted in lower underemployment). However, lower employability and underemployment negatively affected graduates with a bachelor’s degree (particularly a business-related degree), those who were less proficient in English, and those who were Green Card holders. The factors that were influential in the employability of Philippine graduates coincided with the labour market demands of the American employers sampled in this study. The thesis found that the current status of Philippine graduates has improved substantially with a higher percentage of the respondents obtaining jobs commensurate with their educational qualifications as opposed to their initial employment. Philippine graduates with medical technology degrees were particularly successful at obtaining jobs commensurate with their educational qualifications despite relatively few holding advanced degree, but on average this group had resided in the U.S. the longest. Graduates with business-related degrees continued to lag behind those in other degree fields and experienced lower employability and higher underemployment. Despite their initial employment disadvantage, these degree holders were less likely to pursue continuing education or receive additional U.S. school/educational credits. The findings of this thesis provide insight into the employability of Philippine graduates. Because of the sampling restrictions, the findings cannot be extrapolated beyond the scope of this research. These results should only be treated as indicative within the context of this research. However, they provide useful insights for policy-makers, stakeholders and academics in the Philippines.
8

Fiely, Megan Elisabeth. "“Within a Framework of Limitations”: Marianne Strengell’s Work as an Educator, Weaver, and Designer." Bowling Green State University / OhioLINK, 2006. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=bgsu1143405799.

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Genson, Imelida C., University of Western Sydney, College of Health and Science, and School of Natural Sciences. "Erosion and water resources assessment in the Upper Inabanga Watershed, Philippines : application of WEPP and GIS tools." 2006. http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/14335.

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To complement the Inabanga Watershed Project (BSWM, 2005), the study reported here was conducted to assess erosion and water resources degradation focussed on the Upper Inabanga Watershed using the Water Erosion Prediction Project (WEPP) erosion model and geographic information system and GIS tools. The study was divided into two sections. The first section was the assessment of the impact of land uses and farm management practices using five runoff experimental plots and two watersheds. The second section of the study was an application of the WEPP and GeoWEPP erosion models. Except for most of the crop management parameters, local climate, soil and topographic parameters were determined and used as inputs to run the model. The WEPP-GeoWEPP watershed simulations predicted that any increase in agricultural areas increased on-site soil loss and sediment yield from the watershed.
Master of Science (Hons)
10

Rohrlach, Bruce David. "Tectonic evolution, petrochemistry, geochronology and palaeohydrology of the Tampakan porphyry and high sulphidation epithermal Cu-Au deposit Mindanao, Phillipines." Phd thesis, 2002. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/110491.

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Magmatic-related porphyry copper and high-sulphidation epithermal copper-gold ore deposits in continent-margin and intra-oceanic arcs of the Pacific Rim are spatially clustered in discrete volcanic arc segments. Ore-forming episodes likewise occur within discrete time intervals and are temporally associated with intervals of compression within arcs. Understanding the spatial and temporal controls on fertility of magmas requires detailed multidisciplinary studies of young, ore-productive districts where the tectonic evolution of the arc can be closely integrated with the evolution of crustal stress, with the timing of mineralisation and with evolution of petrological, petrochemical and magmatic physico-chemical properties. The late Miocene to Recent magmatism of the Tampakan ore district of southern Mindanao, Philippines, provides this opportunity. Porphyry copper and high sulphidation epithermal mineralisation within the giant Tampakan Cu-Au deposit (2500 Mt@ 0.48% Cu) are hosted by a polygenetic volcanic complex that was constructed over the past 7 Myr. This interval spans the pre-, syn- and late-collision stages of arc-arc collision in the southern Mindanao segment of the Sangihe arc. Synthesis of tectonic reconstructions and of plate motions from GPS data reveal that crustal compression in southern Mindanao commenced at ~7 Ma and peaked at ~4-3 Ma as subduction waned at the divergent Sangihe and Halmahera subduction systems, and during establishment of the nascent Philippine Trench and Cotabato Trench subduction systems. Porphyry Cu mineralisation at 4.24-4.26 Ma (⁴⁰Ar- ³⁹Ar) and high-sulphidation Cu-Au mineralisation at 3.24-3.28 Ma (⁴⁰Ar- ³⁹ Ar; K/Ar) formed during peak compression. Crustal deformation was manifested by regional folding and thrust faulting. Laser-ablation ICPMS ²³⁸U-²⁰⁶Pb dating of detrital and rock-hosted zircon grains, together with ⁴⁰Ar-³⁹Ar and K/Ar radiometric dating and whole-rock chemistry define five magmatic cycles which extended from the late Miocene to the present. These produced four stratovolcanoes that were built and eroded in successive eruptive and erosional cycles. These semi-continuous magmatic products recorded the covariation of magmatic physico-chemical variables as the arc underwent a transition from normal subduction to cessation of subduction associated with compressive crustal stress during arc-arc collision. The volcanic series evolved from water-poor pyroxene-hornblende-phyric basaltic andesites to hornblende-pyroxene andesites and to waterrich hornblende-biotite dacites. Major and trace element chemical data reveal progressive advance of hornblende saturation, and retreat of plagioclase saturation in the crystallisation sequence of successive magmatic cycles. High Sr/Y ratios are commonly attributed as a chemical feature of adakites, which are ascribed an origin by partial melting of an eclogitic source where refractory garnet retains Y. In contrast, high Sr/Y ratios in the Tampakan district are caused by hydrous, high-pressure crystal fractionation in the lower crust, where suppression of plagioclase crystallisation by high magmatic water activities allows Sr to accumulate during crystal fractionation, and crystallisation of hornblende to form lower-crustal hornblende-augitemagnetite cumulates depletes Y from the residual melt. This element ratio (Sr/Y) is identified as a qualitative indicator of the magmatic water activity, and is a robust guide to the ore-forming potential of a magmatic series. Magmatic temperatures for the series range from 765°C to 909°C and volcanic log /02 varies between NNO+l.53 and NN0+2.50. Sulphur abundances in the melt are low (312 to 57 ppm) and decrease systematically with temperature. Data points for the series plot around the anhydrite-saturation curve in :ΣSmelt-temperature coordinates, consistent with sulphur speciation calculations based on measured oxygen fugacity that indicate SO₃:H₂S abundance proportions between ~200: 1 and ~6,000: 1 in the melt. The magmatic series were saturated with anhydrite during much of their evolution. Magmatic water contents were calculated for the successive magmatic cycles that erupted over the past 7 Myr. Magmatic water contents calculated using the Housh and Luhr (1991) plagioclase-melt Na-Ca exchange geohygrometer reveal water contents that increase from 4.1 % in the late Miocene to up to 8.2 % in the Pleistocene. ²³⁸U-²⁰⁶Pb geochronology on 471 zircon samples from the Tampakan volcanic succession were used to parameterise time series in chemical compositions of volcanic rocks and phenocrysts, and time-series in magmatic temperature, oxygen fugacity and wt.% H₂0 in the pre-eruptive magma over the past 7 Myr. U/Ti, U/Ge and Th/Ti ratios in dated detrital zircon grains resolve multiple million-year-scale magma recharge-and-crystallisation cycles within a long-lived lowercrustal chamber. This deep reservoir resides at 18-22 km depth (~5-6 kbars; Al-in-hornblende geobarometry). The cyclic ramp-up and drop of these element ratios coincides with a 7 Myr-long "sawtooth" cyclic ramp-up in concentrations of volatiles and crystal incompatible trace elements in erupted andesites and dacites. Water contents climbed from 4.1 wt.% to 8.2 wt.% as SiO₂ evolved from 57 to 67 wt.%, because the accumulation of volatiles in residual melt was passed down through multiple cycles of magma-chamber replenishment, magma mixing and crystallisation. The lower-crustal chamber was periodically tapped to form overlying subvolcanic chambers and four overprinting stratovolcanoes within the late Miocene to Recent Tampakan polygenetic volcanic complex. A lower-crustal magma chamber having a long lifespan and slow crystallisation rate relative to the frequency of recharge is required in order to generate the observed petrochemical trends and cyclic climb magmatic water content relative to SiO₂ content of the melts. This longevity is thermally and physically permissible where magma entrapment in the lower crust occurs in compressive stress regimes beneath volcanic arc segments that undergo transient collision, or are under-thrust by buoyant segments of the subducting plate. Calculated buoyancy forces of 1-3 km thick basaltic to andesitic melt columns in the ductile lower crust are comparable to horizontal tectonic stresses in orogenic zones, indicating that melt entrapment can be modulated by an ambient stress regime that inhibits magma ascent by dyke propagation. Numerical thermal models created using the 2-D graphical, user-interactive, heat flow program KWare HEAT predict that lower-crustal sills that are entrapped in the lower crust cool extremely slowly, with residual melt fractions remaining above the wet solidus for several million years, so intermittently erupted magmas exhibit chemical continuity over the ~3-10 Myr period of crustal compression in collisional volcanic arcs. The results from this integrated study of the Tampakan district indicate that the spatial and temporal clustering of magmatic Cu-Au porphyry ores in volcanic arcs is a product of shared regional compressive stress which inhibits magma ascent by sub-vertical dyke propagation and promotes development of sub-horizontal magma chambers in the lower crust, where the trapped magma proceeds to crystallise cumulates until the residual melt evolves to sufficient buoyancy to propagate sub-vertical dykes. Volcanics and epizonal plutons related to porphyry-Cu ore in the Tampakan district display trace-element evidence that the melts segregated from high pressure (lower-crustal) cumulates consisting largely of Al-rich augite and hornblende, but little or no plagioclase. Magma chambers in hot lower crust cool very slowly and live long enough to undergo multiple, million-year-scale cycles of magma replenishment and fractional crystallisation and tapping, over the course of which concentrations of "incompatible components" such as H₂O, Cl and SO₃ are passed on through multiple cycles of chamber replenishment and crystallisation and minor discharge and so accumulate to exceptional concentrations relative to major elements (Si₂, AliO₃, Na₂O etc). Successive batches of increasingly H₂O-rich melt leaving the lower crustal chamber began to exsolve a hydrothermal fluid at successively greater depths. Hydrothermal fluids that exsolve at greater depths are denser and more efficient in scavenging Cu from the melt, because the fluid-melt partition coefficient of Cu is extremely pressure sensitive. This study suggests that the transition to metallogenic fertility of magmas at convergent margins is ultimately modulated by compressional stress that induces deep entrapment, build-up to anomalously high water contents and consequent magmatichydrothermal fluid exsolution at deep mid-crustal depths in ascending magmas, and segregation of Cu-rich brines to apical parts of the ascending magma body. The superposition of both porphyry Cu and high-sulphidation-epithermal Cu-Au mineralisation in the Tampakan deposit, and the partial preservation of the host stratovolcanic edifice, allows investigation of the genetic relationship between these two deposit styles and study of the uppercrustal palaeohydrology of a stratocone-centred, ore-forming magmatic-hydrothermal system. ⁴⁰Ar-³⁹Ar dating reveals that the porphyry Cu mineralisation formed during the early Pliocene (4.24 ± 0.02 Ma, 4.26 ± 0.02 Ma), whereas high-sulphidation-epithermal mineralisation formed during the middle Pliocene (3.23 ± 0.03 Ma, 3.34 ± 0.05 Ma, 3.28 ± 0.06 Ma). The ~1 Myr age difference requires their formation from separate magmatic-hydrothermal systems that were established in the upper crust from different batches of melt. Petrochemical trends indicate that both hydrothermal systems emanated from epizonal magma chambers fed from a shared, longlived lower crustal magma reservoir. Erosion of Cycle 3 andesites during collisional uplift exposed porphyry-Cu-stage quartz stockwork veins at the palaeosurface in less than ~ 350 Kyr after porphyry mineralisation. After unroofing of the porphyry system, construction of the Cycle 4a middle Pliocene volcanic centre commenced at 3.93 Ma. A cryptic unconformity between Cycle 3 and Cycle 4a andesites became the principal surface for a stratigraphic groundwater aquifer that acted as a condensor for high-sulphidation-stage magmatic volatiles. Three aspects of the Tampakan high-sulphidation-epithermal palaeohydrological system are investigated: 1) the physical properties and hydrological transport mechanics of the magmatic supercritical fluids along the "magmatic vapor plume" from the site of accumulation in the carapace beneath the deposit to the meteoric- and magmatic-fluid mixing environment within the deposit; 2) identification of the composition and thermal properties of the fluid end-members and the geometry of mixing paths within the deposit; 3) the geometry and relative mixing ratios of magmatic and meteoric groundwater in various regional alteration zones of the district and the effect of topographic forcing of hybrid hydrothermal fluids along the western flank of the volcanic complex. The Tampakan high-sulphidation epithermal mineralisation formed from a dense vapor-like supercritical fluid with a density of ~ 0 .15 to 0 .25 g/ cc that exsolved from a relatively mafic andesitic melt emplaced at shallow depths of 2.6 km to 4 km. These melts had significantly less magmatic water (~3-4 wt.% H20) than the more evolved andesitic melts associated with precursor porphyry Cu mineralisation (~ 6.0 wt.% H20). The lower water content of highsulphidation- stage melts allowed shallower crustal emplacement and fluid exsolution as a low-density vapor, whereas more water-rich porphyry-stage melts from the preceding cycle exsolved a dense supercritical brine phase (0.3 to 0.45 g/cc) at deeper (~ 6 to 8 km) crustal levels. Pressure and enthalpy constraints calculated for the high-sulphidation-stage magmatic fluid at several points along its flow path provide substantial insights into the magmatic fluid transport process. The magmatic vapor ascended along a nearly isochoric decompression path from the site of exsolution to the site of fluid mixing. The density of the vapor increased from ~0.2 g/cc to ~0.3 g/cc over a vertical ascent distance of ~1.2 km. During transit, the vapor cooled conductively by ~350°C. The nearly isochoric vapor transport mechanism through the lithostatically pressured, ductile rock column requires propagation of fluid-filled, fine-scale, migratory hydrofractures, with intimate contact between the vapor and the ductile wall rocks during vapor ascent. This ensured substantial conductive cooling (~875°C to ~525°C) along the ascent path and that thermal contraction of the vapor balanced the tendency to expand with decompression. Instantaneous isoenthalpic decompression of the magmatic-vapor-charged mobile hydrofractures at the lithostatic-hydrostatic interface (brittle/ductile transition) near the base of the deposit, was associated with "instantaneous" cooling of the supercritical vapor from ~525°C to ~375°C. This pressure-temperature quenching efficiently condensed magmatic vapor to a modestly saline (5 wt.% NaCl equivalent) condensate that concurrently mixed with ambient meteoric water within a palaeo-aquifer at the base of the hydrostatic regime. Cooling of the dense magmatic condensate liquid (~0.62 g/cc) by dilution in the mixing column was associated with hydrolysis of SO₂ to H₂SO₄ , HSO₄ , SO₄ and to H₂S which in turn produced a vertical pH gradient and a vertical textural zonation in alteration facies in the advanced-argillic lithocap. Oxygen-isotope and enthalpy balances indicate that sericite in the deep portions of the deposit and pyrophyllite at higher and peripheral regions precipitated from hybrid magmatic-meteoric waters which comprised ~50% magmatic condensate. The hot, hybrid fluids formed a thermally buoyant plume due to transfer of heat from the high-enthalpy magmatic vapor into the meteoric water regime. The plume ascended and became entrained into a stratabound aquifer system on the west slope of the volcano. A substantial hydraulic head in the aquifer is implied by downstratigraphic- slope deflections in the time-integrated proxy fluid isotherms identified by calibration of PIMA II™ infrared spectral parameters with the chemical composition of potassic white mica. These calibrations reveal chemical trends in the composition of potassic white micas that can be tracked across several alteration environments. A central, and deep-seated, hightemperature zone of nearly stoichiometric muscovite coincides with the locus of the inferred magmatic vapour plume. This zone is transitional to shallower and peripheral regions where there is an increasing replacement of K ions by neutral H₂O molecules in the potassic white mica crystal structure, and decreasing Cu and Au grades. These trends reflect a central, deep-level zone of high fluid temperatures, with cooling paths deflected down-palaeo-slope at shallower levels in the volcanic edifice. Substantial magmatic fluid ascended into the hydrostatic regime along a 5 km by 1.5 km wide NNE-trending fault zone that partly controlled mineralisation. Lateral outflow of the hybrid fluids was controlled by regional dilational faults that transect the volcanic centre. Zoning of hydrothermal mineral compositions and assemblages reveal a superb example of hydrothermal plume-groundwater interaction and downslope dispersion. The plume of heated meteoric water and admixed magmatic condensate in the hydrostatic environment was centred within the Tampakan deposit. The deposit is located where gradients in the hybrid fluid's temperature proportion of magmatic fluid are greatest. Mineralisation was localised in the zone of steep temperature and pressure gradients associated with the interface between a deep lithostatic-pressured plume and a shallow hydrostatic-pressured plume.

Books on the topic "Phillipines":

1

Mayuga, Sylvia. Phillipines. 7th ed. (Singapore): APA Productions, 1988.

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Khoo, Swee Chiow. Across the Phillipines in a kayak. Singapore: Angsana Books, 2012.

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Burgess, Robert. Migration and foreign remittances in the Phillipines. [Washington, D.C.]: International Monetary Fund, Asia and Pacific Dept., 2005.

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Rubino, Carl R. Galvez. Intensive Tausug: A pedagogical grammar of the language of Jolo, Phillipines. Springfield, VA: Dunwoody Press, 2005.

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H, Porth, and Von Daniels Curt H, eds. On the geology and hydrocarbon prospects of the Visayan Basin, Phillipines. Hannover: Bundesanstalt für Geowissenschaften und Rohstoffe, 1989.

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6

Honculada, Jurgette A. Transforming the mainstream: Building a gender-responsive bureaucracy in the Phillipines, 1975-1998. Bangkok, Thailand: UNIFEM, 2000.

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7

Wei, Chen. The application of western marketing strategies for market entry and partenership to the business of a Chinese State-owned company entering the Phillipines market. Oxford: Oxford Brookes University, 2001.

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8

Clemente, Emmanuel. A people rising: A photo-documentation on the building of People's Revelutionary Organs of the Governance in the zones of popular control in the Phillipines. [Manila?]: Gintong Tala Publications, 1990.

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9

Herscheid, Fritz. The last New Guinea salvage pirate: The exploits of Fritz Herscheid during the twenty years of post-war salvage in New Guinea and the Phillipines. Yarram, Vic: Oceans Enterprises, 2006.

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10

Kloppenburg, Dale. Phillipine Hoya species: A monograph. Medford, Ore: Orca Pub. Co., 1991.

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Book chapters on the topic "Phillipines":

1

"Map of the Phillipines." In Communal Intimacy and the Violence of Politics, xix. Cornell University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781501762796-004.

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2

MANGAHAS, JOEL, and JOSE TIU SONCO II. "Civil Service System in the Phillipines." In Public Administration and Public Policy, 423–59. CRC Press, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/b10266-26.

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3

Paris, Thelma R. "Women in a Crop-Livestock Farming Systems Project in Santa Barbara, Pangasinan, Phillipines." In Gender Issues in Farming Systems Research and Extension, 269–86. CRC Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9780429043895-19.

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"Athletics as Politics: Japan, the Phillipines, and the Far Eastern Olympics of 1934." In The East Asian Olympiads, 1934–2008, 23–33. Global Oriental, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004212657_003.

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"Meditation (on Phillipians 3:1-12)." In Freedom, 298. BRILL, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004389083_023.

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Reports on the topic "Phillipines":

1

Parkin, D. M. Breast Cancer Screening by Physical Examination: Randomized Trial in the Phillipines. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, October 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada383870.

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Executive summary: Radar imagery interpretation to assess the hydrocarbon potential of four sites in the Phillipines. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), November 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/7248171.

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