Academic literature on the topic 'Southeast Asian mountains'

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Journal articles on the topic "Southeast Asian mountains"

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Tomita, Shinsuke. "Diversity in the relationship between low and upland society in mountainous Southeast Asia." Impact 2021, no. 3 (March 29, 2021): 61–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.21820/23987073.2021.3.61.

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The mountainous areas of mainland Southeast Asia have been an area of interest for researchers for decades. The mountains are located in a region that stretches out to the southern and western parts of China and encompasses different ethnic groups, forming a unique political, historical, social and cultural space. Associate Professor Shinsuke Tomita, Asian Satellite Campuses Institute, Nagoya University, Japan, is exploring the relationship between lowland and upland society in mountainous Southeast Asia, as well as investigating how agricultural productivity can be understood in the context of culture and society. In previous studies, researchers have surmised that interactions between the two societies are one of the key drivers behind the region's formation. An example of this is wet rice farming, which is regarded as the source of political power of the chieftains of the region due to its higher agricultural productivity. As such, researchers have been prompted to better understand the political power derived from wet rice farming and rethink lowland and upland relationships. From a case study in northern Laos, Tomita and the team shed light on relationships that cannot be explained by agricultural productivity. The researchers have also unearthed interesting findings relating to the power of the chieftain, including that the wet rice fields owned by the chieftain are not necessarily larger than other villagers and the power of the chieftain is likely unstable.
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Wu, Chi-Hua, and Huang-Hsiung Hsu. "Role of the Indochina Peninsula Narrow Mountains in Modulating the East Asian–Western North Pacific Summer Monsoon." Journal of Climate 29, no. 12 (June 8, 2016): 4445–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1175/jcli-d-15-0594.1.

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Abstract Unrealistic topographic effects are generally incorporated in global climate simulations and may contribute significantly to model biases in the Asian monsoon region. By artificially implementing the Arakan Yoma and Annamese Cordillera—two south–north-oriented high mountain ranges on the coasts of the Indochina Peninsula—in a 1° global climate model, it is demonstrated that the proper representation of mesoscale topography over the Indochina Peninsula is crucial for realistically simulating the seasonality of the East Asian–western North Pacific (EAWNP) summer monsoon. Presence of the Arakan Yoma and Annamese Cordillera helps simulate the vertical coupling of atmospheric circulation over the mountain regions. In late May, the existence of the Arakan Yoma enhances the vertically deep southwesterly flow originating from the trough over the Bay of Bengal. The ascending southwesterly flow converges with the midlatitude jet stream downstream in the southeast of the Tibetan Plateau and transports moisture across the Indochina Peninsula to East Asia. The existence of the Annamese Cordillera helps the northward lower-tropospheric moisture transport over the South China Sea into the mei-yu–baiu system, and the leeside troughing effect of the mountains likely contributes to the enhancement of the subtropical high to the east. Moreover, the eastward propagation of wave energy from central Asia to the EAWNP suggests a dynamical connection between the midlatitude westerly perturbation and mei-yu–baiu. Including the Annamese Cordillera also strengthens a Pacific–Japan (PJ) pattern–like perturbation in late July by enhancing the cyclonic circulation (i.e., monsoon trough) in the lower-tropospheric western North Pacific. This suggests the contribution of the mountain effects to the intrinsic variability of the summer monsoon in the EAWNP.
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Giersch, C. Patterson. "Across Zomia with merchants, monks, and musk: process geographies, trade networks, and the Inner-East–Southeast Asian borderlands." Journal of Global History 5, no. 2 (June 15, 2010): 215–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1740022810000069.

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AbstractFor several decades, theorists have challenged notions of geographical space as fixed, instead arguing that spatial scales and regional configurations respond to transformations in politics and economies. This has raised questions about permanent regional studies configurations (such as Southeast Asia), sparking the proposal of ‘Zomia’, an alternative region focusing on Asia’s highland borderlands. Building on these developments, this article employs ‘process geography’ methodologies to reconstruct trading networks through the mountains and river valleys of nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Inner Asia’s Kham, East Asia’s Sichuan and Yunnan Provinces, and Southeast Asia. In doing so, it reveals who traded commodities, on what scales they operated, and how their increasingly complex networks were imbricated with state and local power. These networks linked Zomian communities to Chinese and global transformations and influenced local cultural and political changes, suggesting that studies of mobility can uncover hidden geographies of social, political, and cultural change.
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Son, Nguyen Truong, Thomas J. O'shea, Jeffery A. Gore, Gabor Csorba, Vuong Tan Tu, Tatsuo Oshida, Hideki Endo, and Masaharu Motokawa. "Bats (Mammalia: Chiroptera) of the southeastern Truong Son Mountains, Quang Ngai Province, Vietnam." Journal of Threatened Taxa 8, no. 7 (July 26, 2016): 8953. http://dx.doi.org/10.11609/jott.2785.8.7.8953-8969.

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Bat communities of mainland Southeast Asia can be highly diverse. Many are under threat. Despite this, regional faunal composition is not well documented for many areas, including regions of Vietnam. We assessed the biodiversity of bats in a watershed protection forest in the southeastern Truong Son (Annamite) Mountains, southwestern Quang Ngai Province, Vietnam in 2011–2013. Twenty species of insectivorous bats were documented including a high diversity of Murina species Tube-nosed Bats. Diversity and abundance indices were compared with that recorded previously in two nature reserves and one national park in Vietnam, and were higher or comparable in several measures despite the lack of a karst substrate for roosts. Reproduction in the insectivorous bat fauna coincided with the early rainy season. In the late dry season, pregnant females of several species were observed but volant juveniles were not present, whereas in the early wet season adult females were lactating or post-lactating and volant juveniles of nine species were detected. We recorded echolocation calls of 14 bat species; for each species, we compared features of calls with those reported previously in other Asian localities. For some species we found discrepancies in call metrics among studies, perhaps suggesting a greater hidden biodiversity of bats in Southeast Asia.
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Rickart, Eric A., Danilo S. Balete, Robert M. Timm, Phillip A. Alviola, Jacob A. Esselstyn, and Lawrence R. Heaney. "Two new species of shrew-rats (Rhynchomys: Muridae: Rodentia) from Luzon Island, Philippines." Journal of Mammalogy 100, no. 4 (June 6, 2019): 1112–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jmammal/gyz066.

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Abstract The murine genus Rhynchomys includes the large-bodied Philippine “shrew-rats,” highly specialized members of the vermivorous clade of Philippine murids. Four species are recognized, all of which are endemic to Luzon Island: R. soricoides from mountains within the Central Cordillera, R. isarogensis from Mt. Isarog on the Bicol Peninsula, R. banahao from Mt. Banahaw in south-central Luzon, and R. tapulao from Mt. Tapulao in the Zambales Mountains. Field surveys in 2006 and 2008 revealed two additional populations of Rhynchomys, one from Mt. Labo (1,544 m), a dormant stratovolcano at the base of the Bicol Peninsula, the other from Mt. Mingan (1,901 m), the highest peak in the central Sierra Madre of east-central Luzon. Assessment of external and craniodental features of available specimens from throughout Luzon support our description of the populations on Mt. Labo and Mt. Mingan as new species. All species of Rhynchomys are restricted to high-elevation, montane, and mossy forest habitats, separated by intervening lowlands. These discoveries highlight the importance of isolated highland areas in the historical diversification of Southeast Asian murines, and as current centers of endemism.
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Blöch, C., W. B. Dickoré, R. Samuel, and T. F. Stuessy. "MOLECULAR PHYLOGENY OF THE EDELWEISS (LEONTOPODIUM, ASTERACEAE – GNAPHALIEAE)." Edinburgh Journal of Botany 67, no. 2 (May 28, 2010): 235–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0960428610000065.

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Leontopodium is a genus of approximately 30 species with a conspicuous Asian–European disjunct distribution. In this study samples from the Himalayan/Tibetan centre of diversity of the genus, as well as from Europe, were analysed to infer a phylogeny of the genus using sequences of nuclear ribosomal (ITS and ETS) and plastid (matK and trnL/F) DNA. The Southeast Tibetan monotypic Sinoleontopodium [Leontopodium lingianum (Y.L.Chen) Dickoré, comb. nov.] falls into Leontopodium. Monophyly of Leontopodium, including Sinoleontopodium, is supported. Due to low rates of sequence divergence, intrageneric relationships in general are weakly supported, a pattern frequently observed in plant groups centred in the Tibetan Plateau. Three phylogenetic groups can be identified, however, and these are also supported by morphology. The low levels of nucleotide divergence suggest a young age for the group, which has been influenced by the turbulent geological history of the Tibetan Plateau. Leontopodium is a characteristic Sino-Himalayan element that appears to have found its way into the mountains of Europe in geologically recent times. The two European taxa, Leontopodium alpinum and L. nivale, form a genetically distinct group, which, considering the wide geographic disjunction, shows surprisingly little divergence from its Asian relatives.
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Ng, Elize Y. X., Arya Y. Yue, James A. Eaton, Chyi Yin Gwee, Bas Van Balen, and Frank E. Rheindt. "INTEGRATIVE TAXONOMY REVEALS CRYPTIC ROBIN LINEAGE IN THE GREATER SUNDA ISLANDS." TREUBIA 47, no. 1 (June 30, 2020): 39–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.14203/treubia.v47i1.3872.

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Southeast Asian avifauna is under threat from both habitat loss and illegal poaching, yet the region’s rich biodiversity remains understudied. Here, we uncover cryptic species-level diversity in the Sunda Blue Robin (Myiomela diana), a songbird complex endemic to Javan (subspecies diana) and Sumatran (subspecies sumatrana) mountains. Taxonomic inquiry into these populations has previously been hampered by a lack of DNA material and the birds’ general scarcity, especially sumatrana which is only known from few localities. We demonstrate fundamental bioacoustic differences in courtship song paired with important distinctions in plumage saturation and tail length that combine to suggest species-level treatment for the two taxa. Treated separately, both taxa are independently threatened by illegal poaching and habitat loss, and demand conservation action. Our study highlights a case of underestimated avifaunal diversity that is in urgent need of revision in the face of imminent threats to species survival.
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Baldwin, Jane, and Gabriel Vecchi. "Influence of the Tian Shan on Arid Extratropical Asia." Journal of Climate 29, no. 16 (July 27, 2016): 5741–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1175/jcli-d-15-0490.1.

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Abstract Arid extratropical Asia (AEA) is bisected at the wetter Tian Shan (a northern offshoot of the Tibetan Plateau) into east and west deserts, each with unique climatological characteristics. The east deserts (~35°–55°N, ~75°–115°E) have a summer precipitation maximum, and the west deserts (~35°–55°N, ~45°–75°E) have a winter–spring precipitation maximum. A new high-resolution (50 km atmosphere–land) global coupled climate model is run with the Tian Shan removed to determine whether these mountains are responsible for the climatological east–west differentiation of AEA. Multicentennial simulations for the Control and NoTianshan runs highlight statistically significant effects of the Tian Shan. Overall, the Tian Shan are found to enhance the precipitation seasonality gradient across AEA, mostly through altering the east deserts. The Tian Shan dramatically change the precipitation seasonality of the Taklimakan Desert directly to its east (the driest part of AEA) by blocking west winter precipitation, enhancing subsidence over this region, and increasing east summer precipitation. The Tian Shan increase east summer precipitation through two mechanisms: 1) orographic precipitation, which is greatest on the eastern edge of the Tian Shan in summer, and 2) remote enhancement of the East Asian summer monsoon through alteration of the larger-scale seasonal mean atmospheric circulation. The decrease in east winter precipitation also generates remote warming of the Altai and Kunlun Shan, mountains northeast and southeast of the Tian Shan, respectively, due to reduction of snow cover and corresponding albedo decrease.
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Walker, Anthony R. "From the Mountains and the Interiors: A Quarter of a Century of Research among Fourth World Peoples in Southeast Asia (With Special Reference to Northern Thailand and Peninsular Malaysia)." Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 26, no. 2 (September 1995): 326–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s002246340000713x.

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Twenty-five years ago, in 1970, when the first volume of the Journal of South-East Asian Studies made its appearance, I was living in a rather remote mountain village in Phrao district, northern Thailand, about to complete a four-year field project with the Lahu Nyi. I was one of close to a dozen social and cultural anthropologists, at various stages in their professional careers from Ph.D. candidates (such as myself) to seasoned professionals (like the late Bill Geddes), at work among Thailand's so-called “northern hill tribes”. The small expatriate community in the charming Chiang Mai of those days readily joked about “the anthropologist behind every bush in the northern hills”. In fact there were good reasons for this heavy concentration of anthropological research at that time. The 1960s were perhaps the halcyon days for social and cultural anthropology in the Western academy; naturally this happy situation was reflected in the numbers of doctoral candidates proceeding to the field. Moreover, within the mainland Southeast Asia of that time, only Thailand provided academic researchers with relatively easy and more-or-less safe access to its mountain peoples.
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Kozakov, I. K., E. B. Sal’nikova, A. A. Ivanova, and Yu V. Plotkina. "Stages of Formation of the South Altai Metamorphic Belt (Central Asia)." Russian Geology and Geophysics 63, no. 3 (March 1, 2022): 300–311. http://dx.doi.org/10.2113/rgg20204308.

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Abstract —The Hercynian mobile belts in Central Asia include the proper Hercynian and late Hercynian (Indo-Sinian) belts, whose formation is associated with the evolution of the South and Inner Mongolian basins with oceanic crust. Within the South Altai metamorphic belt (SAMB), rock complexes compose tectonic slivers of different ranks. At the early stages, their metamorphic alteration occurred under conditions of the high-temperature subfacies of the amphibolite and, in places, granulite facies. Structurally, the band of the outcrop of these complexes is confined to the Caledonian North Asian continental margin and stretches along the southern slope of the Gobi–Mongolian–Chinese Altay Mountains from southeast to northwest (East Kazakhstan), where they occur in the Irtysh strike-slip zone. We assign these complexes to the Hercynian SAMB running for more than 1500 km. The latter comprises poly- and monometamorphic complexes. Late metamorphic granitoids of the Tseel tectonic sliver (Gobi Altay) in the southeast of the SAMB have been dated at 374 ± 2 and 360 ± 5 Ma. The previous data and these results show that the early (~390–385 Ma) low-pressure and late (375–360 Ma) high-pressure metamorphism proceeded almost along the entire belt. The interval between them was a short tectonic lull. These processes took place during the closure of a Tethyan basin of the South Mongolian Ocean (Paleo-Tethys I). The spatial position of the SAMB was controlled by the structural asymmetry of the basin, with an active continental margin at its northern edge and a passive one at the southern edge (in the present-day coordinates).
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Southeast Asian mountains"

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Lippe, Melvin [Verfasser], and Georg [Akademischer Betreuer] Cadisch. "Simulating the impact of land use change on ecosystem functions in data-limited watersheds of Mountainous Mainland Southeast Asia / Melvin Lippe. Betreuer: Georg Cadisch." Hohenheim : Kommunikations-, Informations- und Medienzentrum der Universität Hohenheim, 2015. http://d-nb.info/1068256133/34.

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Blache, Marianne. "Territoires et identités en Péninsule indochinoise : les Akha et la montagne au Laos." Thesis, Paris 4, 2010. http://www.theses.fr/2010PA040148/document.

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Le Laos est un pays montagneux qui présente une population multiethnique. Traditionnellement, il existe de fortes discontinuités spatiales entre populations de plaine et de montagne. Les Akha, groupe d’essarteurs de montagne, illustrent alors la différence entre une culture spatiale intimement liée à la composante montagnarde, et celle de la population majoritaire lao-thaï, établie dans des paysages rizicoles de plaine. La territorialité des ces deux groupes s’inscrit alors dans deux configurations spatiales particulières, deux territoires identitaires, qui entretenaient jusqu’ici peu de rapports. Ces deux territoires identitaires ont des fonctionnements distincts : celui des Akha est fluide, reproductible, il est un territoire-milieu ; tandis que celui des Lao-thaï est relativement fixe, plus classiquement attaché aux lieux. Aujourd’hui, ces deux territoires identitaires se trouvent dans le territoire national d’un Etat moderne qui essaye toujours de se construire, sur le modèle de l’Etat-nation. Alors que les Lao-thaï, qui exercent le pouvoir dans un régime communiste, n’avaient que peu porté d’intérêt aux espaces montagnards et à leurs populations, le contexte régional et mondial leur fait porter un regard nouveau sur cette montagne. Les défis du développement engendrent des réponses politiques qui touchent particulièrement les territoires identitaires de montagne. D’un côté, les populations montagnardes sont déplacées en plaine afin de leur offrir un accès plus facile au marché et aux structures étatiques, et de l’autre, les espaces montagnards sont de plus en plus exploités pour leurs ressources. La création d’une nation semble être à ce prix
Laos is a mountainous country with a multiethnic population. Traditionally, there are well-defined spatial discontinuities between those living on the plains and those living in the mountains. The Akha, a group that practices slash’ and burn techniques, illustrates the difference between a spatial culture intimately linked to their mountain roots, and that of the majority Lao-Thai, established in the rice paddies of the plains. The territoriality of these two groups is revealed by two particular spatial configurations, two territorial identities, which have little in common. The identities associated with these two territories have distinct functions: that of the Akha is fluid, reproducible, it is a territory – milieu; while that of the Lao-Thai is relatively fixed, classically attached to places. Today, the identities associated with these territories are part of a modern State, which is trying to build itself along the model of the nation-state. At the same time, the Lao-Thai, who hold the power in the communist regime, have barely considered the mountain regions. The challenges of development give rise to political answers that affect particularly the territorial identities of the mountain people. On one hand, the mountain populations are moved in order to offer easier access to markets and state structures, and on the other hand, the mountain spaces are increasingly exploited for their resources. The creation of a nation seems to be at this developmental price
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Thomas, Tresa Mary. "An Investigation of the Characteristics of Monsoon Low Pressure Systems in the Present Climate and their Sensitivity to Topography and Climate Change." Thesis, 2022. https://etd.iisc.ac.in/handle/2005/5965.

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Monsoon Low-Pressure Systems (LPS) are synoptic-scale tropical disturbances that periodically form over the Indian subcontinent during the summer monsoon season (June-September). Apart from being a lifeline to agriculture, the LPS-triggered precipitation could cause catastrophic floods. This thesis investigates the large-scale factors that influence LPS characteristics under the current and future climate change scenarios. In the early part of the thesis, a new approach is developed to track the formation and propagation of LPS over the Indian subcontinent. A detailed statistical and visual comparison is made between LPS tracks generated using our approach applied to ERA-Interim reanalysis data and tracks obtained in previous studies. Furthermore, extreme rainfall at locations in the vicinity of LPS is analyzed which could be valuable for flood risk assessment during the monsoon season in central India.       In the latter part of the thesis, a fully coupled version of the Community Earth System Model (CESM 1.2.2) is run at 0.9°×1.25° spatial resolution, and 6-hourly output is generated for track analysis. The model’s ability to simulate the characteristics of LPS is first assessed by performing a present-day control simulation. Simulations to study the sensitivity of LPS statistics to topographical features in the south Asian region (presence or absence of southeast Asian mountains and the height of Tibetan and Himalayan Orography (THO)) and the change in LPS characteristics under climate change are also performed. Simulations without the southeast Asian mountains enable determining the influence of these mountains on the downstream amplified systems (remnants of Pacific tropical cyclones) over the Bay of Bengal. The sensitivity analysis on the influence of the height of THO shows an interesting result: while a decrease in monsoon precipitation with a reduction in the height of THO is simulated, the number of LPS increases. A detailed analysis of the dynamic factors leading to this counter-intuitive result is performed. Finally, the change in LPS characteristics and the associated large-scale SST and circulation anomalies in the Indian Ocean and south Asian region are assessed for the RCP8.5 emissions scenario. It is found that the monsoon circulation is weakened, summer monsoon precipitation over India is enhanced, and the number of LPS remains nearly unchanged in a warmer world.
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Yokoyama, Satoshi. "A geographical study on the basis for existence of mountainous villages in northern Laos." 2003. http://www.tulips.tsukuba.ac.jp/limedio/dlam/B23/B2366109/1.pdf.

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Eldridge, M. "New Mountain, New River, New Home? The Tasmanian Hmong." Thesis, 2008. https://eprints.utas.edu.au/7276/1/01Front.pdf.

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This study examines the first group of largely preliterate refugees resettled in Tasmania after the 1975 Communist takeover of Laos. Hill tribe people, the Tasmanian Hmong left Laos and spent years in Thai refugee camps. This thesis examines the possible reasons for their secondary migration to various locations in Queensland. Their departure from Tasmania raised questions about why this apparently well-settled community left the island. For example, many people assumed it was because of Tasmania’s cool climate. The thesis creates a context in which to examine the Hmong’s motivation to leave the island state, with reference to theories of migration, diaspora and globalisation. Oral histories draw out the stories of individual Hmong, their involvement in the Secret War in Indo-China, the escape from Laos, life in Thai refugee camps, their resettlement in Tasmania and subsequent departure for Queensland. Hmong informants include those remaining in Tasmania, those who left for Queensland and those who later returned to Tasmania. These interviews are balanced with voices of professionals and volunteers involved in settlement of the Hmong. Participant observation and itinerant ethnography have been employed, making use of everyday opportunities to collect information from which to develop ideas and to explain the secondary migration of the Hmong. This ‘history from below’, places value on the stories of ordinary people as a valuable resource. The research concludes that, in addition to the desire to create a mega-community of Hmong in Queensland — in an attempt to counter loss of tradition and culture, and build Hmong cohesiveness — secondary migration was influenced by a desire for family reunification and a strong economic motive. It demonstrates that secondary migration is typical of many refugee communities. In particular, the secondary migrations observed in diasporic Hmong communities have parallels with migrations of Hmong from China and with traditional movements in Laos, where swidden agriculture requires establishment of new villages when depleted soil or sickness affects settlements. The research is important because there has been little recorded about the Hmong community in Tasmania, nor about other Australian Hmong communities. Since the once vibrant Hobart community is now a remnant population, it is important to place on record its story as part of recent social history. In examining a refugee community such as the Hmong, this thesis offers an investigation of the circumstances of becoming refugees, an analysis of settlement experiences and an exploration into the context and reasons for secondary migration. In addition, it provides an entry into comparative research on other refugee communities, which has relevance for those who work with refugees and are interested in their demographics.
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Books on the topic "Southeast Asian mountains"

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Chanu-hkeh. Run for the mountains. Bloomington, Ind: Xlibris Corp., 2011.

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Poynor, Alice. East of the misty mountains. Singapore: Overseas Missionary Fellowship, 1991.

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Zou jin Dayao Shan: Guangxi Jinxiu Yao zu wen hua kao cha zha ji = Trekking into the great Yao mountains : a cultural survey of the Yao people of Jinxiu in Guangxi. Nanning Shi: Guangxi ren min chu ban she, 2006.

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Zou jin Dayao Shan: Guangxi Jinxiu Yao zu wen hua kao cha zha ji = Trekking into the great Yao mountains : a cultural survey of the Yao people of Jinxiu in Guangxi. Nanning Shi: Guangxi ren min chu ban she, 2006.

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O'Connor, Michaela. The Kmhmú story: From the mountain jungles of Laos to urban America. Orinda, CA: Perfect Page Pub., 2005.

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Jonsson, Hjorleifur. Mien relations: Mountain people and state control in Thailand. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2004.

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Mien relations: Mountain people and state control in Thailand. Ithaca, N.Y: Cornell University Press, 2005.

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Languages of the Himalayas: An ethnolinguistic handbook of the greater Himalayan Region : containing an introduction to the symbiotic theory of language. Leiden: Brill, 2001.

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Takemura, Takuji. Yao zu de li shi he wen hua: Hua nan, dong nan ya shan di min zu de she hui ren lei xue yan jiu = The Yao people's history and culture : social anthropological research on mountainous region nationalities in the south China and the Southeast Asia. Beijing Shi: Min zu chu ban she, 2003.

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Moving mountains: Ethnicity and livelihoods in highland China, Vietnam, and Laos. Vancouver: UBC Press, 2010.

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Book chapters on the topic "Southeast Asian mountains"

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Franco, F. Merlin, and Wendy A. Mustaqim. "Introduction to Ethnobotany of the Mountain Regions of Southeast Asia." In Ethnobotany of Mountain Regions, 3–28. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-38389-3_208.

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Franco, F. Merlin, and Wendy A. Mustaqim. "Introduction to Ethnobotany of the Mountain Regions of Southeast Asia." In Ethnobotany of Mountain Regions, 1–26. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-14116-5_208-1.

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Romig, Thomas, Tina Jehle, Phan Van Luc, and Ute Mackenstedt. "A Survey of Selected Livestock Parasites in Son La." In Sustainable Land Use in Mountainous Regions of Southeast Asia, 222–25. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-71220-6_21.

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Hau, Angela, and Matthias von Oppen. "Interregional Trade Flows and Market Stability." In Sustainable Land Use in Mountainous Regions of Southeast Asia, 290–305. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-71220-6_28.

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Schreinemachers, Pepijn, Holger L. Fröhlich, Gerhard Clemens, and Karl Stahr. "From Challenges to Sustainable Solutions for Upland Agriculture in Southeast Asia." In Sustainable Land Use and Rural Development in Southeast Asia: Innovations and Policies for Mountainous Areas, 3–27. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-33377-4_1.

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Neef, Andreas, Benchaphun Ekasingh, Rupert Friederichsen, Nicolas Becu, Melvin Lippe, Chapika Sangkapitux, Oliver Frör, et al. "Participatory Approaches to Research and Development in the Southeast Asian Uplands: Potential and Challenges." In Sustainable Land Use and Rural Development in Southeast Asia: Innovations and Policies for Mountainous Areas, 321–65. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-33377-4_9.

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Saint-Macary, Camille, Alwin Keil, Thea Nielsen, Athena Birkenberg, Le Thi Ai Van, Dinh Thi Tuyet Van, Susanne Ufer, Pham Thi My Dung, Franz Heidhues, and Manfred Zeller. "Linkages Between Agriculture, Poverty and Natural Resource Use in Mountainous Regions of Southeast Asia." In Sustainable Land Use and Rural Development in Southeast Asia: Innovations and Policies for Mountainous Areas, 175–212. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-33377-4_5.

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Fröhlich, Holger L., Joachim Ingwersen, Petra Schmitter, Marc Lamers, Thomas Hilger, and Iven Schad. "Water and Matter Flows in Mountainous Watersheds of Southeast Asia: Processes and Implications for Management." In Sustainable Land Use and Rural Development in Southeast Asia: Innovations and Policies for Mountainous Areas, 109–48. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-33377-4_3.

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Marohn, Carsten, Georg Cadisch, Attachai Jintrawet, Chitnucha Buddhaboon, Vinai Sarawat, Sompong Nilpunt, Suppakorn Chinvanno, et al. "Integrated Modeling of Agricultural Systems in Mountainous Areas." In Sustainable Land Use and Rural Development in Southeast Asia: Innovations and Policies for Mountainous Areas, 367–432. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-33377-4_10.

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Stahr, Karl, Gerhard Clemens, Ulrich Schuler, Petra Erbe, Volker Haering, Nguyen Dinh Cong, Michael Bock, et al. "Beyond the Horizons: Challenges and Prospects for Soil Science and Soil Care in Southeast Asia." In Sustainable Land Use and Rural Development in Southeast Asia: Innovations and Policies for Mountainous Areas, 31–107. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-33377-4_2.

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Conference papers on the topic "Southeast Asian mountains"

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Kasuya, Y., Y. Inagawa, A. Yamamoto, J. Mitsui, and T. Ushida. "Field Tests On A New Pre–Supporting System For Shallow Mountain Tunnels." In 18th Southeast Asian Geotechnical Conference (18SEAGC) & Inaugural AGSSEA Conference (1AGSSEA). Singapore: Research Publishing Services, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.3850/978-981-07-4948-4_181.

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Lin, M. L., C. H. Chen, K. L. Wang, and B. S. Yu. "Numerical Simulation Of Rock–Fall Susceptibility In The Danfon Mountain Area, Taipei, Taiwan." In 18th Southeast Asian Geotechnical Conference (18SEAGC) & Inaugural AGSSEA Conference (1AGSSEA). Singapore: Research Publishing Services, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.3850/978-981-07-4948-4_191.

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Hughes, Nigel, Trisha Banerjee, Sekhar Mukherjee, Kyaing Sein, and Marufa Chowdhury. "THE OCEAN ON TOP OF OUR MOUNTAIN: PLACE-BASED GEOSCIENCE OUTREACH IN SOUTH AND SOUTHEAST ASIA." In GSA Connects 2021 in Portland, Oregon. Geological Society of America, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2021am-364545.

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Wei, Li. "Application of RS and GIS on analyzing forest crown canopy interception amount to annual precipitation in mountainous forest region in southeast China." In Third International Asia-Pacific Environmental Remote Sensing Remote Sensing of the Atmosphere, Ocean, Environment, and Space, edited by Xiaoling Pan, Wei Gao, Michael H. Glantz, and Yoshiaki Honda. SPIE, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.466900.

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Clark, S. "Regional Tectonics & Structural Framework of Offshore Aceh's Andaman Sub-Basin, Northern Sumatra, Indonesia." In Indonesian Petroleum Association 44th Annual Convention and Exhibition. Indonesian Petroleum Association, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.29118/ipa21-g-30.

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The three-way collision of the Indo-Australian, Eurasian and Pacific plates have resulted in Southeast Asia being the most tectonically complex region on Earth. This is particularly true for Offshore Aceh’s Andaman Sub-Basin, which has undergone complex late Eocene-Recent evolution. Despite a long history of hydrocarbon exploration and production, data scarcity in the offshore means that the Sub-Basin’s regional tectonics and structural framework have been poorly understood. Pre-1996 2D seismic data were low-fold and low-offset, however the 2019 PGS (NSMC3D) regional 3D survey imaged the entire Cenozoic sequence, enabling the delineation of a high-resolution tectonic framework for the first time. Integration of interpretations drawn from geophysical datasets with a 2019 biostratigraphy study has refined the ages of critical sequence boundaries and advanced the understanding of major structural elements. GEM™, the Geognostics Earth Model, has been used to place these interpretations in a regional tectonic and kinematic context using a series of high resolution plate animations. Andaman Sub-Basin formation initiated in response to the northward motion of India and collision with Eurasia, suturing the West Burma and Sibumasu Terranes through the middle-late Eocene. Continued northward motion of the Indo-Australian Plate resulted in further subduction along the Sunda Trench with associated oblique back-arc extension in present-day onshore and offshore Java and Sumatra. Concurrent rotation of Sundaland, with sinistral strike-slip motion along the Ranong and Khlong Mauri fault zones, resulted in the two rifting phases within the late Eocene (~40Ma) to early Oligocene in the Andaman Sub-Basin. Significant inversion events at 30Ma and 23Ma formed in response to dextral transpression associated with rotational extrusion of Indochina and Sundaland. Rapid subsidence followed the 30Ma inversion, resulting in a switch to post-rift sag and bathyal conditions during which turbidites infilled seabed topography. The onset of dextral strike slip between the West Burma Terrane along the Saigang fault system occurred at ~26Ma, causing transtension in the Andaman Sub-basin that terminated at 23Ma. At approximately 5Ma inversion and toe thrusts developed along the Sub-Basin’s southern margin due to uplift within the Barisan mountains. Refinement of the tectonic model, integrated with updated biostratigraphic and geochemical models, resulted in a revised tectono-stratigraphy for the Andaman Sub-Basin, which provides a predictive depositional model in which paleogeography and structural reactivation can be understood in a regional context.
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