Similar Results
Geochronology of India--A Review/Bhanumathi Ramakrishnan and Abhijit
Isotopic age of Peninsular and extra-Peninsular India: a review: 1. General.
2. Southern Granulite Terrain.
3. Karnataka/Dharwar Craton.
4. Transition zone.
5. Eastern Ghats Mobile Belt.
6. Eastern Indian Craton.
7. Central Indian Precambrian.
8. Western and Northern Indian Precambrian.
9. Purana Basins.
10. Basic Dykes.
11. Deccan traps.
12. Himalaya.
13. Lesser Himalaya.
14. Higher Himalaya.
15. Trans-Himalaya.
Discussion. Acknowledgements.
II. Isotopic age database of Peninsular and Extra-Peninsular India: 1.
Tamil Nadu. 2.
Kerala. 3.
Karnataka. 4.
Andhra Pradesh. 5.
Orissa. 6.
Bihar and West Bengal. 7.
Madhya Pradesh. 8.
Maharashtra. 9.
Western Region. 10.
Western and Northern Indian Precambrian. 11.
Lesser Himalaya. 12.
Higher Himalaya. 13.
Trans-Himalaya. References.
Locality index. Appendix: Isotope Map of India.
From the Foreword: "This special publication is the first attempt by GSI on detailed computerized geochronological database with details of analytical parameters of each age data on the entire rocks of India including both the
(less)Air Pollution Control in Industries/T.K. Ray T
Theory, Selection and Design of Air Pollution Control Equipment: 1. State of world environment.
2. State of technology.
3. Emission standards and regulations.
4. Selection of control equipment.
5. Gas-particle interaction.
6. Mechanical dust collector.
7. Fabric filter.
8. Electrostatic precipitator.
9. Scrubber.
10. Some useful definitions, formulae and conversion chart.
Vol. II.
Applications of Air Pollution Control Equipment: 1. Applications of APC equipment in industries.
2. Flue gas desulphurisation and denitrification.
3. Retrofitting.
4. Gas conditioning.
5. System design.
6. Emission measurement.
7. Design of chimney.
8. Design of dust handling equipment.
9. Some aspects of structural design of dust collectors.
10. Fan.
11. Handling explosive dusts.
12. Costing of APC equipment.
"Air Pollution Control is largely based on the practical experience gathered from the actual installations over the years. This book in two volumes attempts to share the practical knowledge and long experience of the author in the field of
(less)Gandhi, Gandhism and Our Times : An
India
As areas of specific concern for India, Ray lists population growth, the quality and stock of human resources, access to energy resources, and agrarian reform. But beyond these more immediate concerns his study is concerned with fundamental questions of good governance in India
(less)A Concise History of Vedic Literature/Bidyut Lata
Quick & Easy Way To Effective Speaking
Fiction in Films, Films in Fiction: The
The Degree of Anglicisation and the External Point of View. From Word to image, and Back.
Correspondence and the New English India. “Whether English is really an Indian language or not may be difficult to answer.
But English in India is surely a distinct and fast-expanding culture. In this first-ever book on Indian English film, Sreetilak draws a colourful and accurate picture of the social life of English in India, showing the significant ways films and fiction in Indian English correspond to each other and respond together to the emergent new English India.
The progress from the English-admiring gentry of Aparna Sen’s 36 Chowringhee Lane to the confident urban Indians of Mira Nair’s Monsoon Wedding parallels the social evolution of Indian English culture. In fiction, instead of a laid-back Malgudi what we see today is the metropolises of
(less)Dynamic Memory English Speaking Course Through Punjabi (PB)
Studies in Literature in English
The Speaking Tree: Celebrating Happiness
The Speaking Tree: Celebrating Happiness
Studies in Literature in English
S. Eliot, the greatest poet of the twentieth century, examine the expatriate sensibility of two American women writers--Bharati Mukherjee and Jhumpa Lahiri--of Indian extraction, reconnoitre West Africa through the eyes of Mary Kingsley and Gerald Durrell, visit Chinua Achebe and then end up with the Afro-American novels
(less)A Comparative Study of the Indian Poetics
Introduction: search for the literary universal. 2.
Alamkara and the rhetorical school. 3.
Indian theory of guna and dosa, in kavyasarira, and stylistics and the western theory of form. 4.
Vakrokti and oblique poetry. 5.
Svabhavokti and statement poetry..
6. Aucitya and decorum.
7. Dhvani and suggestion.
8. Rasa and pleasure.
9. Indian theory of Sphota and Derrida's theory of Ecriture.
10. Imitation: Bharata and Aristotle.
11. Conclusion.
Bibliography. Index.
"The fact that literature, though culture-bound and period-based, has a universal and timeless appeal implies that there is something in a literary work, which, for lack of any better term, may be called literary universal that transcends time and space across lands and cultures. The speculations of the aestheticians of the west and of India, about the locus of literariness or what constitutes literariness, though in all probability developed independently, have many ideas in common.
The book explores the affinities and differences
(less)Biodiversity Reserve : A Goldmine for Aquaculture/P.
Culture fishery: 1. Aquaculture in freshwater impoundment.
2. Aquaculture in brackishwater impoundment.
II. Capture fishery: 3.
The Kulti Estuary. 4.
The Bhagirathi Hooghly Estuary. III.
The Sundarban Delta: 1. Introduction.
2. Biological characteristics of the main Sundarbans.
3. Common fish and crustaceans of the Mangrove.
4. The Estuarine fishery of Sundarban Delta : its trend.
5. Analysis of fish landing from the Hooghly-Malta Estuarine system of Sundarban Delta during 1966-67 to 1970-71.
6. The Hilsa fishery.
7. Winter migratory Bagnet fishery of the Hooghly Estuary.
8. The gear.
References. IV.
Past and present of Sundarban Delta: 1. Kolkata Wetland - a nightmare of the past.
2. Canals of Kolkata - their impact on the Sundarbans ecosystem.
3. Metamorphosis of Sundarban Delta - its impact on aquatic life.
4. Progressive environmental changes of the Sundarban Delta and the Estuarine ecosystem vis a vis fish abundance and their composition.
5. Sequence of morpho-ecological events
(less)Agenda for North-East India/edited by B. Datta
Policies of food security: an agenda for change/Madhura Swaminathan. 2.
Globalization-yet another threat to food security and regional parity in India/Ashok Kumar Maiti and Subhendu Chakrabarti. 3.
Food security and agricultural growth: prospects for the North-Eastern region/M.P.
Bezbaruah. 4.
Food insecurity in India with special reference to North Eastern region/P.M.
Passah. 5.
Food security of North East India for twenty-first century/S.N.
Goswami, B.K.
Sarma and S.B.
Singh. 6.
Agriculture should get high priority in the North-East/V.S.
Mahajan. 7.
Determinants of production and instability of rice in North Eastern states of India/S.B.
Singh, K.K.
Datta and Kh. B.
Singh. 8.
The 21 century and the emerging scenario and issues of social science research in North-East India/K. Alam.
9. Some issues of social science research in North-East India in the 21 century/S.
B. Chakrabarti.
10. Social science research in the N.
E. region in the 21 century/B.
B. Kumar.
11. Identifying researchable issues for 21 century N.
E
(less)Gandhi Handbook/Manik Jain and Mrinal Kanti Ray
2. Antigua and Barbuda.
3. Austria.
4. Belgium.
5. Benin.
6. Bernera Islands.
7. Bhutan.
8. Brazil.
9. Burkina Faso (Upper Volta).
10. Burma.
11. Cameroun.
12. Central African Republic.
13. Chad (Tchad).
14. Chile.
15. Comoros.
16. Congo.
17. Congo (Democratic).
18. Costa Rica.
19. Cuba.
20. Cyprus.
21. Czechoslovakia.
22. Davaar Island.
23. Djibouti.
24. Dominica.
25. Easdale Island.
26. Egypt.
27. Fiji.
28. Fujeira.
29. Gabon.
30. Gambia.
31. Germany.
32. Ghana.
33. Gibraltar.
34. Great Britain.
35. Greece.
36. Grenada.
37. Grenadines of Grenada.
38. Guinea Bissau.
39. Guyana.
40. Hungary.
41. India.
42. Indonesia.
43. Iran.
44. Ireland (EIRE).
45. ISO Sverige.
46. Italy.
47. Kazakhstan.
48. Khor Fakkan.
49. Kyrgyzstan.
50. Liberia.
51. Luxembourg.
52. Macedonia.
53. Madagaskar.
54. Maldives.
55. Mali.
56. Malta.
57. Manama.
58. Marshall Islands.
59. Mauritania.
60. Mauritius.
61. Mexico.
62. Micronesia.
63. Monteserrat.
64. Mordovia.
65. Morocco.
66. Mozambique.
67
(less)Rabindranath Tagore's Gora
In his philosophy of life the best of the East and that of the West are reconciled into a harmonious whole. His inclusive mind aspired after the Universal Man shining in the glory of creation and joie de vivre.
With the passage of time, Tagore, our first Nobel laureate, has only grown in stature and is now reckoned as an increasingly significant and rich personality and a genius for all times
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