Academic literature on the topic 'Quartz Victoria'

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Journal articles on the topic "Quartz Victoria"

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Hughes, Martin J., G. Neil Phillips, and Stephen P. Carey. "Giant Placers of the Victorian Gold Province." SEG Discovery, no. 56 (January 1, 2004): 1–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.5382/segnews.2004-56.fea.

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ABSTRACT The Victorian gold province has yielded 2500 tonnes (t) Au, nearly 2 percent of cumulative world gold production, mostly mined between 1851 and 1910. Fifty-five percent (1375 t) was placer gold from modern and paleostream systems, and from eluvial deposits, and the remainder came from primary quartz vein-related deposits. Most of the alluvial gold placers are in unconsolidated or weakly cemented quartz pebble conglomerate and gravel, dominated by hydrothermal quartz, although a few paleoplacers are within duricrusted conglomerate that required crushing. Large and abundant gold nuggets were common. Placer gold deposits formed in three intervals following uplift in the Late Cretaceous, Late Eocene, and Pliocene. An important factor in the preservation of the paleoplacers has been their burial by younger sediments and basalt flows, with consequent protection from erosion and dispersal. Factors in the formation of the giant gold placers of Victoria include the following: (1) the existence of a major primary gold province with several multimillion-ounce gold deposits; (2) uplift and reactivation of older faults; and (3) high rainfall and deep Paleogene weathering.
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Lennox, P. G., and S. D. Golding. "Quartz veining in simply folded arenites, Cape Liptrap, southeast Victoria, Australia." Australian Journal of Earth Sciences 36, no. 2 (June 1989): 243–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08120098908729484.

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Birch, William D. "Mineralogy of the Silver King deposit, Omeo, Victoria." Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria 129, no. 1 (2017): 41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/rs17004.

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The Silver King mine (also known as Forsyths) operated very intermittently between about 1911 and the late 1940s on Livingstone Creek, near Omeo, in northeastern Victoria. The deposit consists of six thin and discontinuous quartz lodes that are variably mineralised. Assays of up to 410 ounces of silver per ton were obtained but there are only a few recorded production figures. Examination of representative ore samples shows that the main silver-bearing minerals in the primary ore are pyrargyrite, freibergite, andorite and the rare sulphosalt zoubekite, which occur irregularly with pyrite, arsenopyrite, galena and sphalerite. Phase assemblage data indicate that crystallisation occurred over an interval from about 450°C to less than 250°C, with the silver-bearing minerals crystallising at the lowest temperatures. The lodes were formed by the emplacement of hydrothermal solutions into fractures within the Ensay Shear Zone during the Early Devonian Bindian Orogeny. There are similarities in mineralisation and timing of emplacement between the Silver King lodes and the quartz-reef-hosted Glen Wills and Sunnyside goldfields 35‒40 km north of Omeo.
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Wilson, C. J. L., P. M. Schaubs, and L. D. Leader. "Mineral Precipitation in the Quartz Reefs of the Bendigo Gold Deposit, Victoria, Australia." Economic Geology 108, no. 2 (February 21, 2013): 259–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.2113/econgeo.108.2.259.

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Gabo-Ratio, J. A. S., K. D. Jabagat, O. B. Soberano, K. Yonezu, and Y. H. Lee. "Geochemistry and geochronology of intrusive units in the Suyoc epithermal deposit: Constraints on magma fertility in the Mankayan Mineral District, Philippines." IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science 1071, no. 1 (August 1, 2022): 012021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1755-1315/1071/1/012021.

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Abstract The Mankayan Mineral District in northern Luzon, Philippines is host to world-class Cu-Au hydrothermal deposits such as the Far Southeast porphyry copper deposit and the Lepanto, Victoria, and Teresa epithermal deposits. It also hosts the Suyoc epithermal prospect in the southern portion of the district. This study focuses on the petrography, whole rock geochemistry, mineral chemistry and U-Pb dating of the three massive batholitic intrusive units (gabbro-diabase basement, tonalite-granodiorite, and hornblende quartz diorite) in Suyoc. U-Pb dating results reveal that the tonalite is Late Eocene in age (37.20 ± 4.70 Ma), while the hornblende quartz diorite was dated 3.18 ± 0.77 Ma (Middle Pliocene). The gabbro-diabase exhibits tholeiitic signature while the tonalite-granodiorite and hornblende quartz diorite are calc-alkaline. Trace element plots for the three host rocks indicate formation in a subduction setting. Furthermore, discrimination diagrams point to an adakitic character for the younger hornblende quartz diorite and typical arc rock signatures for the older gabbro and tonalite-granodiorite. The results indicate that hydrothermal mineralization is attributed to the hornblende quartz diorite, which coincides with the Pliocene mineralization recognized in the Mankayan Mineral District.
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Henry, D. A., R. J. Squire, C. J. L. Wilson, and T. J. Rawling. "Structural and lithological controls on the high-grade Hangingwall Reef quartz – gold veins, Stawell, Victoria." Australian Journal of Earth Sciences 53, no. 5 (October 2006): 759–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08120090600827439.

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Cook, Y. A. "Precambrian rift-related magmatism and sedimentation, south Victoria Land, Antarctica." Antarctic Science 19, no. 4 (August 16, 2007): 471–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0954102007000612.

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AbstractPrecambrian continental extension is described in detail for the first time in the Victoria Land segment of the Transantarctic Mountains and is comparable with plume related intercontinental rifting of the Afar area, Africa. The Baronick Formation comprises igneous-derived conglomerate, marble and volcanic to sub-volcanic igneous layers. Volcanic and carbonate horizons were eroded in a fluvial or marine environment and provided debris for mass flow and slump deposits which formed in a marginal marine basin in the Precambrian. Clasts in these deposits include basalt, trachyte and comendite, and along with the interbedded volcanic layers of basalt, trachyte and quartz syenite, indicate proximity and contemporaneity of volcanic activity. Igneous layers and source rocks for clasts of the Baronick Formation have an enriched MORB chemistry and underwent albitization of calcic feldspar before erosion and conglomerate deposition. The Highway Suite forms a kilometre-scale body of gabbro and dolerite plugs and is interpreted as a slice of transitional continental oceanic crust. The chemistry of all igneous rocks suggests a continental rift environment and the associated sediments are consistent with such a setting. The Baronick Formation was locally intruded by sills of the Highway Suite; however, the main body of the Highway Suite was juxtaposed against the Baronick Formation during greenschist facies shearing before c. 551 Ma.
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Josh, Matthew, Melvyn J. Lintern, Anton W. Kepic, and Mike Verrall. "Impact of grain-coating iron minerals on dielectric response of quartz sand and implications for ground-penetrating radar." GEOPHYSICS 76, no. 5 (September 2011): J27—J34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1190/geo2010-0321.1.

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An unexpected result of ground-penetrating radar (GPR) surveys in the Great Victoria Desert (South Australia) was the lack of returning signal in what appeared to be a favorable environment for GPR, with dry silica sand and calcrete aggregates in the near surface. We found that the dielectric response of the dry sand samples had much higher dielectric losses than comparable sands from Western Australia and that the dielectric losses are controlled by the presence of iron oxide minerals, although iron concentrations themselves are only around 0.4%. The samples contained over 90% quartz, with subsidiary amounts of carbonates, kaolin, and smectite occurring with the iron oxide minerals as a coating on the quartz grains. An acid washing procedure removed the reducible iron oxide minerals from the clay coating but left the clays substantially unaltered. Subsequent dielectric and magnetic analysis of the samples indicates that the iron oxide minerals removed during the washing process are responsible for the reduction of GPR penetration at 250 MHz from approximately 10 m to only 1 m.
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Renna, Maria Rosaria, Massimo Tiepolo, and Riccardo Tribuzio. "In situ U-Pb geochronology of baddeleyite-zircon pairs using laser-ablation ICPMS: the case-study of quartz gabbro from Varney Nunatak (central Victoria Land, Antarctica)." European Journal of Mineralogy 23, no. 2 (May 3, 2011): 223–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1127/0935-1221/2011/0023-2083.

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EVANS, D. T. W. "The Midas Pond Gold Prospect, Victoria Lake Group, Central Newfoundland: A Mesothermal Quartz Vein System with Epithermal Characteristics." Exploration and Mining Geology 9, no. 1 (January 1, 2000): 65–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.2113/0090065.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Quartz Victoria"

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Hill, Matthew P. "Evolution of quartz and calcite microstructures exhumed from deep brittle-ductile shear zones in the Southern Alps of New Zealand : a thesis submitted to the Victoria University of Wellington in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science in Geology /." ResearchArchive@Victoria e-Thesis, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/10063/33.

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Books on the topic "Quartz Victoria"

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Marco, Dolcetta, Scott Susan, and Colombo Laura Chiara, eds. Cézanne, Mont Sainte-Victoire. Richmond Hill, Ont: NDE Pub., 2000.

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Brian, Clarke. Brian Clarke: Malerei und Farbfenster 1977-1988 : Hessisches Landesmuseum Darmstadt, 9.11.1988-29.1.1989. Darmstadt, Germany: Hessian State Museum, Darmstadt, 1988.

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Brian, Clarke. Between Extremities. New York: Pace Gallery, 2013.

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Victoria, As I Found It, During Five Years of Adventure, in Melbourne, On the Roads, and the Gold Fields: With an Account of Quartz Mining, and the Great Rush to Mount Ararat and Pleasant Creek. Franklin Classics, 2018.

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Henry, Brown. Victoria, As I Found It, During Five Years of Adventure, in Melbourne, On the Roads, and the Gold Fields: With an Account of Quartz Mining, and the Great Rush to Mount Ararat and Pleasant Creek. Franklin Classics, 2018.

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Henry, Brown. Victoria, As I Found It, During Five Years of Adventure, in Melbourne, on the Roads, and the Gold Fields: With an Account of Quartz Mining, and the Great Rush to Mount Ararat and Pleasant Creek. Creative Media Partners, LLC, 2018.

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Anonyma. Famous Victories of Henry the Fifth: The Earliest Known Quarto 1598. Creative Media Partners, LLC, 2018.

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Anonyma. The Famous Victories of Henry the Fifth: The Earliest Known Quarto, 1598. Franklin Classics Trade Press, 2018.

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Daniel, Peter Augustin, and Charles Praetorius. The Famous Victories of Henry the Fifth: The Earliest Known Quarto, 1598, a Facsimile in Foto-Lithography. Franklin Classics Trade Press, 2018.

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Daniel, Peter Augustin, and Charles Praetorius. The Famous Victories of Henry the Fifth: The Earliest Known Quarto, 1598, a Facsimile in Foto-Lithography. Franklin Classics Trade Press, 2018.

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Book chapters on the topic "Quartz Victoria"

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Kontou, Tatiana, Victoria Mills, and Kate Nichols. "Alinari Brothers, Photograph of Marble Quarry at Carrara, Italy, C. 1860s." In Victorian Material Culture, 147. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315400266-46.

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"VICTOR MALE QUARTET." In Encyclopedia of Recorded Sound, 2267–68. Routledge, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203484272-820.

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Hack, Daniel. "Racial Mixing and Textual Remixing: Charles Chesnutt." In Reaping Something New, 102–34. Princeton University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691196930.003.0005.

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This chapter studies how Charles Chesnutt's engagement with Victorian literature forms a plot of its own. This plot develops over time and ultimately brings to the surface aspects of this engagement that remain submerged in his earlier work. Chesnutt not only leverages Victorian literature to tell the stories he wants to tell but also takes a more critical stance toward his intertexts, probing and exposing shortcomings in their treatment of race. Borrowing the title of his last novel, then, the chapter suggests that Victorian literature is Chesnutt's quarry: both source and prey. Here, the double-edged nature of this engagement manifests itself most fully and strikingly when Chesnutt seizes on Victorian references to an identity as marginal and marginalized in that literature as it is central to his own writings: that of the racially mixed individual, the mulatto.
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Russell, Tony. "“The Picture on the Wall”/“My Carolina Girl”." In Rural Rhythm, 55–58. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190091187.003.0015.

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Lewis, Tom. "Victories Great and Small." In Empire of the Air, 329–59. Cornell University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501759321.003.0014.

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This chapter recalls the contributions and inventions of Lee de Forest, Edwin Howard Armstrong, and David Sarnoff. It first looks at Armstrong's legacies, financial settlements, and equipment which possessed significant historic value. The chapter then explores how Armstrong's wife, Marion, spent the next quarter century redressing the wrongs her husband had suffered, and ensuring that he received the recognition after death that had eluded him in life. The chapter also discusses the life of Lee de Forest at the end of the war — enjoying relatively good health and a joyful marriage. It explicates the publication of his autobiography, on which he had been working for many years — Father of Radio. Father of Radio proved to be pure de Forest, his attempt to record his life as he saw it, embellished with his own recollections. It recorded de Forest's success and failures as only he could see them. The chapter narrates David Sarnoff's personal triumph and personal failure in the last two decades of his life. It also investigates how he masked those failures through self-aggrandizement on a grand scale.
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Thrush, Coll. "Civilization Itself Consents." In Indigenous London. Yale University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300206302.003.0011.

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This chapter considers two moments—an ethnographic display of military regimentation from the third quarter of the nineteenth century, and an anti-modern jeremiad from the first years of the twentieth. Both involved North American Indigenous people and were deeply shaped by narratives of civilization and progress. But perhaps more importantly, both happened in a specific place and time: the late Victorian and Edwardian city, where particular kinds of urban development created new anxieties about London and its empire. These strands came together at a series of large-scale Indigenous spectacles in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. A Seneca runner, a group of Aboriginal Australian cricketers, a Maori rugby side, and Lakota Wild West Show performers all riveted London, and their presence there speaks much not just about Indigenous visitors but about Victorian and Edwardian—and imperial—culture.
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Joyce, Simon. "Two Women Walk into a Theater Restroom." In LGBT Victorians, 191—C5.F6. Oxford University PressOxford, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192858399.003.0006.

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Abstract This chapter begins by returning to Chapter 2 and the basis we find in Ulrichs for a common interest that could fold transgender and intersex people into a coalitional politics aiming to justify same-sex desire. As a test-case, this chapter focuses on the 1870–71 trial of Stella Boulton and Fanny Park, who have been positioned by gay historians mainly as (male homosexual) “cross-dressers” whose failed felony prosecution for inciting others to commit sodomy anticipated the more spectacular prosecution of Wilde a quarter century later. Against this narrative, I read the evidence presented at the trial and what we have come to know of their lives—including the prominence given to Fanny and Stella’s bathroom use, preferred names and pronouns, and physical anatomy—as pointing to a different form of anticipation: Stella in particular becomes more legible as the prefiguration of the modern trans woman, and her example helps to bring into focus similar precursors, including Frederike Blanke who functioned in Ulrichs’ work as a limit case of the Uranian/Weibling. In addition to rereading the trial transcripts, letters, and press coverage to excavate an emergent trans subjectivity, this chapter also highlights similar legal defendants in nineteenth-century Britain who might also have been mischaracterized as gay men or cross-dressers, and suggests that Fanny and Stella’s sustained interests in photographic self-representation indicates how visual depictions have helped to anchor narratives of transsexual transition.
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Beecher, Jonathan. "Ghost of the Latin Quarter." In Victor Considerant and the Rise and Fall of French Romantic Socialism, 424–45. University of California Press, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520222977.003.0019.

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Taher-Kermani, Reza. "Persia in the West." In The Persian Presence in Victorian Poetry, 13–74. Edinburgh University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474448161.003.0002.

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This chapter surveys a range of sources from which the British derived their knowledge of Persia, and emphasises the persistent influence of some of these sources, most notably the Bible and the literature of ancient Greece. Moving forward from the Greek and Biblical representations of Persia, the study traces the persistence of this ancient understanding in the Early-Modern period, particularly as against the gradual emergence of first-hand contacts with the country, such as those of the Sherley brothers. An analysis of the British growing interest in Persian studies in the final quarter of the eighteenth century also forms part of the design of this chapter. The chief figure here is Sir William Jones, the founding father of the academic study of Oriental literatures. The chapter examines Jones’s ‘A Persian Song of Hafiz’ (1772) as one of the earliest examples of the scholarly treatment of Persian poetry in English, before moving on to explore the dynamic between the nineteenth-century politicised vision of Persia and the narrative of its decline and decay through studying James Morier’s popular fiction, The Adventures of Hajjî Baba of Ispahan (1824).
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Stray, Christopher. "Bernard Lightman and Bennett Zon (eds), Victorian Culture and the Origin of Disciplines. (New York and London: Routledge, 2020), xiii+320pp. ISBN: 978036228422." In History of Universities: Volume XXXIV/2, 199–201. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192857545.003.0015.

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This chapter analyzes the twelve essays arranged in Bernard Lightman and Bennett Zon's Victorian Culture and the Origin of Disciplines. The book covers a wide range of academic subjects: mathematics, zoology, child psychology, history, anthropology, archaeology, classics, art history, dance history and musicology. The first section is on professional validation, in which Lightman investigates the connection, and tension, between the emergence of new specialized disciplines and the continuing concern to see science as a unity, while the second section deals with university education. The third section is concerned with society journals, such as David Lowther's piece that explores the ferocious struggles between rival British natural history journals in the second quarter of the nineteenth century. The remaining three chapters discusses literary genres, disciplinary boundaries, and interdisciplinarity.
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Conference papers on the topic "Quartz Victoria"

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Burton, Robert, and Christopher Stephenson. "82 Effect of a quarter century of adjuvant therapy and mammographic screening on breast cancer mortality in the state of victoria, australia." In Preventing Overdiagnosis Abstracts, December 2019, Sydney, Australia. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjebm-2019-pod.94.

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Fernandes, João, Aurélio Hoppe, Christian Krambeck, Rosemeri Laurindo, Julio Cesar Refosco, and Ralf Marcos Ehmke. "Consolidação de Bases para o Diagnóstico do Distrito de Inovação de Blumenau." In XV Escola Regional de Banco de Dados. Sociedade Brasileira de Computação - SBC, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5753/erbd.2019.8483.

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Este artigo apresenta o processo de consolidação das bases de dados do Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística (IBGE), OpenStreetMaps (OSM) e da Prefeitura Municipal de Blumenau (PMB), tendo como intuito fazer o diagnóstico quanto aos aspectos socioeconômicos e de desenvolvimento dos bairros Victor Konder e Itoupava Seca da cidade de Blumenau, podendo ser adaptado para o diagnóstico de outras regiões. Tais informações se mostram pertinentes para a compreensão do distrito e também consideráveis para o planejamento de políticas e ações que venham a ocorrer na região considerando cinco eixos: cidade, pessoas, ambiente, economia e mobilidade.
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Conti, Flávia Pereira. "Design de sistemas para análise do ciclo de vida de um produto: slow fashion." In Systems & Design 2017. Valencia: Universitat Politècnica València, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/sd2017.2017.6649.

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O artigo descreve o processo de reavaliação e esmeração de um sistema de produção da microempresa de semijoias Cantrelle Design, com o objetivo de otimizar a estrutura organizacional e de produção por meio do design de sistemas e o slow fashion. O design de sistemas por considerar o produto como um conjunto inteiro, e o slow fashion, porque visa a democratização do processo de criação de peças de forma mais lenta, preocupando-se com o desenvolvimento dos processos. Para alcançar um resultado satisfatório, utilizou-se a metodologia desenvolvida por Ezio Manzini e Carlo Vezzoli, o Life Cycle Design (LCD), procurando reduzir os inputs e outputs o máximo possível, tanto em termos quantitativos quanto qualitativos. Ponderando assim, a nocividade de seus efeitos, por meio da avaliação de todas as fases do produto, que são subdivididas em pré-produção, produção, distribuição, uso e descarte. Por se tratar de semijoias, sendo, então, um bem durável, requere-se poucos recursos durante o uso e manutenção, concentra-se em reduzir o impacto nas fases antecedentes e posteriores ao uso. Como resultado, obteve-se uma potencialização na gestão da empresa, reduzindo os gastos energéticos e materiais. Atingiu-se tal solução por meio de uma melhor organização de etapas operacionais nas fases antecedentes ao uso do produto, buscando adequar-se ao sistema slow fashion, com a otimização do volume de compras e logística de vendas, reavaliação da embalagem e material aplicados. Percebeu-se que a matéria prima já em uso é a menos impactante para o ambiente por ser de alta durabilidade e passível de reaproveiramnento. Por fim, redesenhou-se a embalagem com tecido reciclado, de uma forma que possa ser reutilizada pelo consumidor final após ser adquirida. Conclui-se que é possível readequar um sistema já em andamento, adaptando-o de forma a reduzir seu impacto na natureza por meio do slow fashion e design de sistemas, valorizando o processo de produção, não só o lucro financeiro que a venda do produto proporciona, além de aperfeiçoar o sistema como uma unidade e repensar o conjunto para valorizar a qualidade e o modo de produção, expondo a possibilidade de renovar o sistema industrial vigente de modo sustentável e consciente, por meio de uma ação local, visando atingir um macrossistema de forma harmônica. Palavras-chave: slow fashion, design de sistemas, semijoias, sustentabilidade, metodologia.ReferênciasBASTAGNINO, Luigi. Design di Sistemi i Sistemi Industriali Aperti: un nuovo approccio al progretto, un nuovo modello di bussiness. Sem ano. 26 slides. Apresentação em Power-point. BUENO, Bárbara. Movimento slow life: desacelerando a vida. 2016. Disponível em < https://pt.linkedin.com/pulse/movimento-slow-life-desacelerando-vida-b%C3%A1rbara-mantovani-bueno>. Acesso em: 24 de maio de 2017.DELLA MEA, Luciana. A moda em [re]evolução: slow fashion. 2014. Disponível em <http://www.autossustentavel.com/2014/05/a-moda-em-revolucao-slow-fashion.html>. Acesso em 24 de maio de 2017.DELLA MEA, Luciana. Design de sistemas para a sustentabilidade. 2012. Disponível em <http://www.autossustentavel.com/2012/06/design-de-sistemas-para.html>. Acesso em 24 de maio de 2017. MANZINI, Ezio; VEZZOLI, Carlo. O desenvolvimento de produtos sustentáveis: os requisitos ambientais dos produtos industriais. São Paulo. Editora da Universidade de São Paulo, 2002. PAPANEK, Victor. Design do the Real World: human ecology and social change. Londres. Thames & Hudson Ltd, 1985.REVIDE. O conceito de fast fashion. 2010. Disponível em <https://www.revide.com.br/editorias/moda/o-conceito-de-fast-fashion/>. Acesso em 24 de maio de 2017. SARATE, Fernanda. O movimento slow life e a desaceleração da sociedade de consumo contemporânea. 2009. Disponível em < http://www.comunicacaoetendencias.com.br/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/TCC-Fernanda-Sarate.pdf>. Acesso em: 24 de maio de 2017. SILVA, Samantha; BUSARELLO, Raul. Fast fashion e slow fashion: o processo criativo na contemporaneidade. 2016.
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