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The Himalaya is a living mountain mass which in addition to its rocks landforms and processes is the homeland of a people who must continually adapt to their geodynamically very active yet inspiring environment © M Fort 1978 soils chemical regeneration water springs Fig 8 and house building quarrying of the largest blocks
·And of course they re home to the mighty Mount Everest the tallest mountain on the planet at 8 849m along with more than 100 peaks standing at over 7 000m ve got 40bhp a six speed gearbox upside down forks and are fast rugged reliable and perfectly suited for the Himalayan mountains as the name suggests We ve fully loaded
·The increase in demand of building stones and construction grade sand has resulted in aggressive hard rock quarrying in many parts of the world The problems are to be evaluated in detail for the judicious use of resources on the one hand and ensuring health of the ecosystems on the other The present study aims to evaluate the impact of hard rock
·The Himalayan mountain belt is a unique subaerial orogenic wedge characterized by tectonically rapid ongoing crustal shortening and thickening intense surface denudation and recurrent great Mw
·Nandakini valley of Garhwal Himalaya degradation due to landslides deforestation illegal quarrying mining severe infiltrate dam construction tunnel and road construction causes ecological imbalance and environmental problems The Himalayan mountain system is structurally and tectonically a complex terrain consisting of folds thrust
·The Trans Himalayas It is the name denoted to the Himalayan Ranges which are north of the Great Himalayan Range ; They stretch in an east west direction for a distance of about 1 000 km ; Their average elevation is approximately 3000 meters above mean sea level ; The prominent ranges that comprise the Trans Himalayas include The Karakoram Range
·Biodiversity hotspots in mountains are among the richest and vulnerable ecosystems in the world and they provide home of many threatened and endemic species which are reliant on nature to endure Indian Himalayan Region IHR covers the major part of Himalaya Biodiversity Hotspot and represented by around 8700 angiosperms 51
·The paper attempts to juxtapose the theoretical debate on sustainability and the practical issues pertaining to two well known environmental movements in the Indian Himalayanr egiono f Tehri
·The Himalayan mountain ranges were formed when the Indian Plate collided with the Eurasian Plate This process started about 50 million years ago and is still happening today Plate Tectonics The Earth s surface is made up of large and small plates The Indian Plate moved north and hit the Eurasian Plate
·As a result the Himalayan mountains are on the verge of a major ecological crisis threatening the collapse of the very life support system The impact of unscientific and irrational resource development processes and the resultant deteriorating environmental conditions in the Himalayas are not confined to the region itself but also adversely affect the environment and
·The current extension of quarrying activity active and abandoned quarries reduced the connectivity and a significant area % of the Highland grassland of the Tandilia Mountains Grassland conservation planning should include quarrying as a significant threat and management actions must be considered to reduce its impact
·Overview of regional change Despite concerns and efforts to protect and secure forests deforestation and forest degradation have profoundly affected the natural forest ecosystems across the Himalayas Brandt et al 2012 The entire Himalayan region is reported to have rapid deforestation and natural ecosystems in the region although appearing
·This cycle was on deadly display in 2015 when a magnitude temblor caused a swath of the Himalayan range to sink by nearly two Different zones in a string of mountains may produce
·The projected temperature changes with and scenarios for 2036 65 and 2066 95 relative to 1976 2005 in three HKH subregions defined by grid cells within each subregion above 2 500 m see Fig suggest that during summer winter relatively higher lower warming will occur over the hilly regions of the
·It is clear that a necessary condition for the initiation and formation of Duns is a fault related folding and consequent uplift that promotes the development of positive topography outer Siwalik Hills ; together with the pre existing MBT related mountain front to the north this results in a broad synformal depression in the landscape bounded by two fault related
2 ·Himalayan Mountain Range The Himalayan Mountain forms a broad continuous arc for nearly 2 600 km 1 600 mi along the northern fringes of the Indian subcontinent starting from the bend of the Indus River at the northwestern region to the Brahmaputra River in the east The Himalayan Mountain range averaging 320 to 400 km 200 to 250 miles in width rises sharply
·Tectonic models for the Oligocene Miocene development of the Himalaya mountain range are largely focused on crustal scale processes and developed along orogen perpendicular cross sections Such
·Summary of geobiodiversity evolution in the Tibeto Himalayan region THR according to the mountain geobiodiversity hypothesis TP Tibetan Plateau
·The state of Himachal Pradesh is inherently prone to disasters more so as it is a part of the Himalayan mountain system Frequent natural disasters of varying intensity hamper the development of
·Semantic Scholar extracted view of "Patterns in plant species diversity along the altitudinal gradient in Dhauladhar mountain range of the North West Himalaya in India" by N Sharma et al Uncontrolled quarrying impacts the local geology and vegetation thus it is Expand 1 Excerpt;
·source of high quality freshwater for the Himalayan communities in such regions About 60 70% of the Indian Himalayan region population directly depends on springs to meet domestic and livelihoods needs NITI Aayog 2018b; Siddique et al 2019 In addition springs have high cultural and religious value for these communities
·The slopes with R2 > in the regression models for high Mountain to high Himalaya except in November and R2 > for mid hill and high Mountain except January
4 ·The Himalayan mountain range includes Mt Everest the highest mountain on earth The lofty Himalayas are among the most dramatic and visible creations of plate tectonic forces The Himalayas and Tibetan plateau trend east west and stretch 2 900 km along the border between India and Tibet The collision of two large landmasses India and
·Four types of quarrying were found in Ilocos Sur n amely clay extraction at Bulala Vigan City; gravel quarrying at Banaoang Bantay and at Bio Tagudin; sand quarrying at Namruangan Cabugao