Results 271 to 280 of about 3,304,339 (314)
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Irish Geography, 1999
RISH AGRICULTURE IN TRANSITION: A CENSUS ATLAS OF AGRICULTURE IN THE REPUBLIC OF IRELAND, by Seamus LafTerty, Patrick Commins and James A. Walsh. Dublin: Teagasc in association with NUI Maynooth. 1999.viii + 154pp. IR£20.00Pb. ISBN 1 841 700649.
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RISH AGRICULTURE IN TRANSITION: A CENSUS ATLAS OF AGRICULTURE IN THE REPUBLIC OF IRELAND, by Seamus LafTerty, Patrick Commins and James A. Walsh. Dublin: Teagasc in association with NUI Maynooth. 1999.viii + 154pp. IR£20.00Pb. ISBN 1 841 700649.
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Irish Geography, 2000
AbstractTOWARDS AN ISLAND POPULATION OF 6 MILLION: IMPLICATIONS FOR SPATIAL DEVELOPMENT. Dublin: Irish Academy of Engineering, 2000. 51 pp. No price given. No ISBN.
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AbstractTOWARDS AN ISLAND POPULATION OF 6 MILLION: IMPLICATIONS FOR SPATIAL DEVELOPMENT. Dublin: Irish Academy of Engineering, 2000. 51 pp. No price given. No ISBN.
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Irish Geography, 1995
CORK CITY: STREET MAP AND INDEX. Scale 1:15,000. Dublin: Ordnance Survey of Ireland, Sixth Edition, 1994. IR£4.00; CORK CITY/CORCAIGH, Scale 1:12,000, with 1:8000 city centre inset. Dublin: The ICON Group Ltd. 1994. IR£3.50.
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CORK CITY: STREET MAP AND INDEX. Scale 1:15,000. Dublin: Ordnance Survey of Ireland, Sixth Edition, 1994. IR£4.00; CORK CITY/CORCAIGH, Scale 1:12,000, with 1:8000 city centre inset. Dublin: The ICON Group Ltd. 1994. IR£3.50.
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Maps, map making and use of maps
Australian Surveyor, 1958Abstract Map making forms an ever increasing part of survey activities and, although we have been laggard in this work in Australia, there has been progress in development of organised mapping in recent years. As more mapping is published and becomes available for use, appreciation of its value by a larger number of people will be possible, and the ...
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2015
The previous chapter has usefully confirmed one of the starting points for the overarching topic that this volume has been addressing: a discussion of spatiality may appear at the outset to be an exercise in intellectual abstraction divorced from everyday reality, and hence may not be seen as “relevant” when addressing the human dimensions of cultural ...
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The previous chapter has usefully confirmed one of the starting points for the overarching topic that this volume has been addressing: a discussion of spatiality may appear at the outset to be an exercise in intellectual abstraction divorced from everyday reality, and hence may not be seen as “relevant” when addressing the human dimensions of cultural ...
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Harmonic mappings and quasiconformal mappings
Journal d'Analyse Mathématique, 1986Given a homeomorphism, \(w=H(e^{i\theta})\), \(0\leq \theta \leq 2\pi\), of the unit circumference \(\partial U\), we denote by Q(H) the class of quasiconformal homeomorphisms of U onto itself with boundary values H on \(\partial U\). The extremal dilatation for the class Q(H) is \textit{\(K_ H=\inf \{K[f]:\) \(f\in Q(H)\},\) where \[ K[f]=ess \sup [(|
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