1,023 research outputs found
Modern Pastoralism and the Middle Landscape
According to commonplace definitions, a myth is a story that expresses and symbolizes deep-seated and exemplary aspects of human existence. Moreover, it often sets out to resolve conflict or to allow reconciliation of two otherwise antithetical positions..
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Are master plans effective in limiting development in China's disaster-prone areas?
The effectiveness of urban master plans in limiting development in a disaster-prone area of China was empirically investigated by measuring cities’ land-cover changes against their master plans. If a master plan serves as guidance for urban polices that reduce property loss from earthquakes, floods, landslides,land subsidence, and rises in sea level, it will substantially limit urban development in areas at risk
from environmental hazards. An environmental risk map weighted toward valuable forms of land cover was generated using geospatial databases of China’s Yangtze River Delta region. Based on this data, the effects of five master plan measures—ring-road patterns, block size, the area of urban built-up lands, the locations of industrial sites, and preservation zoning—were tested using the multiple regression method.
Cities showing a high degree of compliance, in particular with preservation zoning, had a smaller amountof urban land located in high-risk zones, on average, by 14 km2. Among the top ten cities exposed to disproportionately high risks, eight were towns and only two were cities like Huzhou and Kunshan
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Does large-sized cities' urbanisation predominantly degrade environmental resources in China? Relationships between urbanisation and resources in Changjiang Delta Region
Outward expansion of urban lands in the developing nations is often associated with a substantial loss of environmental
resources such as forests, wetlands, freshwater and cash crop fields. Yet, determining how different aspects of urbanisation –
such as city population size and spread pattern of built-up lands – contribute to the cumulative loss of resources remains
controversial. In this study, data sets were constructed describing changes to land cover across 65,200 grid cells at 1 km2
spatial resolution for China’s Changjiang Delta Region over the past 60 years. The results showed that the region lost 12.2%
of total resource sites. The distribution of resource degradation showed a highly dispersed pattern and was not confined to
a few intense areas associated with large cities. No empirical evidence was found that city population size alone accurately
predicts the distribution of resource loss. Very large cities (N = 4) contributed 35% to the total loss, demonstrating impacts
similar to those of much more scattered towns (N = 230). Urban expansion of large cities may lead to extensive resource
loss; however, a set of non-linear mechanisms, such as the diminishing effects of per-unit area urban spread on resources and
interactions between urban patterns and the size of urban spread, can also play a significant role in downsizing the negative
effects of large cities on resource sites. Thus, effective urban policies should carefully weigh the cumulative urban spread
mechanisms of both large and small cities responsible for spatially dispersed degradation of environmental resources
A new species of Indigofera (Fabaceae: Faboideae) from Central Australia
A new species, Indigofera centralis Peter G. Wilson & Rowe, is described from Central Australia, west of the Finke Gorge National Park in the Northern Territory; it resembles some other inland species (I. fractiflexa, I. gilesii, I. warburtonensis and I. helmsii) but differs most conspicuously by the relatively larger flowers
Constructing a Geographic Information System for Watershed Management
Paper by Peter G. Rowe and Bill A. Bavinge
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The pattern of foreign property investment in Vietnam: the apartment market in Ho Chi Minh City
As globalization proceeds, transnational property development is increasing. Especially in emerging markets, foreign developers’ influence in changing the local landscape is becoming significant. In this research, the behavioral patterns of foreign developers in the apartment market of Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam were identified. To understand the dynamics of foreign developers, the types of products that were being created, where the investments were located, and the differences in development strategies adopted by foreign developers in comparison to domestic counterparts were identified. To accomplish this, data on apartment projects and statistics were collected, and a series of spatial analyses including sieve mapping, histogram analysis, factor analysis and logistic regression was conducted. In addition, closer examination was made of specific cases to understand the dynamics among foreign and domestic developers, also allowing the identification of some regularities in the patterns of foreign developments. Besides presenting detailed results, this paper also seeks to account for the conditions that appear to have generated these patterns and characteristics
Double beta decay and the proton-neutron residual interaction
The validity of the pn-QRPA and -RQRPA descriptions of double beta decay
transition amplitudes is analyzed by using an exactly solvable model. It is
shown that the collapse of the QRPA is physically meaningful and that it is
associated with the appearance of a state with zero energy in the spectrum. It
is shown that in the RQRPA this particular feature is not present and that this
approach leads to finite but otherwise spurious results for the double beta
decay transition amplitudes near the point of collapse.Comment: LaTeX, 10 pages plus 3 fugures as LaTeX files. Accepted for
publication in Physics Letters
An Initial Investigation of Structural and Nonstructural Flood Control Alternatives for Cypress Creak, Texas
Paper by Peter G. Rowe, James B. Blackburn, Jr., and Philip B. Bedien
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