Academic literature on the topic 'Indian Brigade'

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Journal articles on the topic "Indian Brigade"

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Hills, Carol, and Daniel C. Silverman. "Nationalism and Feminism in Late Colonial India: The Rani of Jhansi Regiment, 1943–1945." Modern Asian Studies 27, no. 4 (October 1993): 741–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0026749x00001281.

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Between 1943 and 1945, 1,500 Indian women in Burma, Malaya and Singapore exchanged their colorful saris for the khakis, breeches, half caps and boots of the Rani of Jhansi Regiment, the all-female brigade of the Indian National Army (INA). Under the leadership of Subhas Chandra Bose, Hindus, Muslims, and Sikhs, members of the moneyed elite and the daughters of rubber plantation laborers shared the same food and fate to fight a jungle war for India's freedom.
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Kumar, G. Jayanth. "Electronic Hover Craft." International Journal for Research in Applied Science and Engineering Technology 9, no. VI (June 30, 2021): 4343–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.22214/ijraset.2021.35945.

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Electronic hovercraft is a device which can easily move on sand, water, hill areas and also muddy places. The main reason behind this project is to rescue the people in the flooded region. Our Indian army forces like Indian army, Indian navy will have greater use of this project. For example coming to our local areas just recently happened these situation is in Hyderabad we got floods so many people lose their houses, property.so many people were injuired. There is no such reliable system to rescue there. In that one senior citizen was died due to the helpless situation these type of situation makes so hurting to us. In that cases these type of devices may save their lives. In this system we have Bluetooth, Arduino UNO, propellers, two navigation motors which can give right and forward moving directions. Considering the price, simple implementations this project proses a less cost compare to fire brigade. With the help of Bluetooth in distance we can operate the system. With driving manually we can operate. Due to this one person can be saved. Instead of a driver one extra person can save. By using Bluetooth Arduino control app we can send command to the Arduino. When we give command we can operate, navigate the device with the help of down propeller air fills in cushion with the help of back propeller it will move towards forward direction with this we can control the device navigation for this we have 12volt 3.5Amps Battery power supply. Amplified current version battery to drive the motors.
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Mohamed, Fadel Ali. "From the Memory of History: The Painted Room at Bardia." Libyan Studies 25 (January 1994): 287–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0263718900006439.

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Bardia has a natural deep-water harbour confined by cliffs, making it an ideal submarine haven. It held a strategic position in the last war in connection with the capture of Tobruk, and was used by both the Germans and British as a supply base (Fig. 1). Set back from the shoreline were numerous single-storey, flat-roofed buildings overlooking the harbour, one of which was a lookout post where the mural under discussion survives.On 30th December 1941 the Allies launched a decisive attack on Bardia (Liddell Hart 1953, 177–178), which surrendered on 2nd January 1942 (Murphy 1961, 511–512). On 27 th January Rommel had struck again at Benghazi; General Auchinleck gave orders to withdraw, and formed a front line near Gazala in early February.According to its contemporary War Diary, the 5th Battalion, East Yorkshire Regiment arrived in the Western Desert from Palestine and Syria on 20th February, and two days later took over from the 11th Indian Brigade approximately 20 miles south of Gazala (W.O.169/5076). One of the soldiers in this batallion was Private John Frederick Brill 4617871 of the Royal Army Service Corps, the artist of the mural in the Painted Room at Bardia.
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Choedon, Yeshi. "India on Humanitarian Intervention and Responsibility to Protect: Shifting Nuances." India Quarterly: A Journal of International Affairs 73, no. 4 (November 2, 2017): 430–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0974928417731646.

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India’s opposition to humanitarian intervention has been influenced by its colonial experience and its predisposition towards the principles of sovereignty and non-intervention. However, India did not adopt a strident opposition in the post-Cold War due to the changed power configuration. The article discusses how India adopted a cautious approach and yet used every opportunity to remind the international community the baleful effect of intervention in the internal affairs. After securing concession to a considerable extent on the ambitious Responsibility to Protect (R2P) and when most of the countries showed an inclination to accept humanitarian intervention in the form of ‘R2P’ at the UN summit in 2005, India grudgingly went along accepting it. India participated in the deliberation on the implementation of R2P and took its stand on various crises in which R2P was evoked. The experience of NATO’s Libya operation under R2P was regarded as substantiation of India’s apprehension of the misuse of the concept, and India reverted its position to the sceptical view of humanitarian intervention/R2P. By mere complaining about the mixing of peace enforcement with peacekeeping, when the United Nations deployed ‘intervention brigade’ for the protection of civilians, India lost the opportunity to take the initiative to propose a new mechanism to deal with the humanitarian crisis in atrocious internal conflicts.
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Aguilar Martínez, Susana, Esteban Valtierra Pacheco, Manuel de Jesús González Guillén, José María Salas González, Aurelio León Merino, and Martín Hernández Juárez. "Brigadas comunitarias para la conservación y gestión de los recursos forestales en San Miguel Topilejo, Tlalpan, Ciudad de México." Sociedad y Ambiente, no. 24 (October 5, 2021): 1–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.31840/sya.vi24.2361.

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El objetivo del estudio es determinar la importancia de las brigadas comunitarias en los procesos de conservación y gestión de los recursos forestales en San Miguel Topilejo, Ciudad de México (CDMX). Se aplicó una encuesta a miembros de las brigadas, que fue complementada con observación directa. Los resultados indican que hay factores como la urbanización, la tala ilegal, plagas e incendios forestales que han afectado el estado del bosque. Las labores de conservación y protección de los recursos forestales están limitadas por condiciones sociales, económicas y técnicas bajo las que operan las brigadas. El valor de la investigación es que recopila la visión de los brigadistas que son la vanguardia social para la gestión de los bosques en la CDMX. En conclusión, los brigadistas consideran que han mejorado las condiciones de los bosques debido a los trabajos de reforestación, mantenimiento y vigilancia que realizan. Sin embargo, la conservación de los bosques no depende sólo de la operación eficiente de las brigadas, sino también de factores como: condiciones laborales adecuadas, capacidad de organización de la comunidad, planeación para realizar actividades de conservación, apoyo financiero y técnico, redes de colaboración, así como de factores internos y externos en torno a la gobernanza del territorio.
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Aguilar Martínez, Susana, Esteban Valtierra Pacheco, Manuel de Jesús González Guillén, José María Salas González, Aurelio León Merino, and Martín Hernández Juárez. "Brigadas comunitarias para la conservación y gestión de los recursos forestales en San Miguel Topilejo, Tlalpan, Ciudad de México." Sociedad y Ambiente, no. 24 (October 5, 2021): 1–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.31840/sya.vi24.2361.

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El objetivo del estudio es determinar la importancia de las brigadas comunitarias en los procesos de conservación y gestión de los recursos forestales en San Miguel Topilejo, Ciudad de México (CDMX). Se aplicó una encuesta a miembros de las brigadas, que fue complementada con observación directa. Los resultados indican que hay factores como la urbanización, la tala ilegal, plagas e incendios forestales que han afectado el estado del bosque. Las labores de conservación y protección de los recursos forestales están limitadas por condiciones sociales, económicas y técnicas bajo las que operan las brigadas. El valor de la investigación es que recopila la visión de los brigadistas que son la vanguardia social para la gestión de los bosques en la CDMX. En conclusión, los brigadistas consideran que han mejorado las condiciones de los bosques debido a los trabajos de reforestación, mantenimiento y vigilancia que realizan. Sin embargo, la conservación de los bosques no depende sólo de la operación eficiente de las brigadas, sino también de factores como: condiciones laborales adecuadas, capacidad de organización de la comunidad, planeación para realizar actividades de conservación, apoyo financiero y técnico, redes de colaboración, así como de factores internos y externos en torno a la gobernanza del territorio.
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Kaul, Asha, and Vidhi Chaudhri. "Partnering for business transformation: the Wipro Consulting Services story." Emerald Emerging Markets Case Studies 2, no. 8 (October 17, 2012): 1–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/20450621211291815.

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Subject area Business transformation processes, change management and business strategy. Study level/applicability The case can be used to study business transformation processes and would be relevant for courses on change management and business strategy. It shouldbe studied in the context of behavioral and organizational challenges in implementing an organization-wide change. The case is targeted at MBA students and/or executive participants with professional experience who would be able to link the learningto corporate experience. It can be used for courses on organizational change, business strategy, and change management. Case overview The case, set in India in the year 2011, is positioned in the business consulting domain, and provides insight into managing change from the perspective of a consulting partner. The case discusses challenges and presents processes followed by Wipro Consulting Services (WCS) in conducting an integrated business transformation exercise at Brigade Enterprises Ltd (BEL), a leading firm in India's real estate sector. The BEL engagement had busted the myth that an integrated business transformation could not be conducted in an unorganized sector, and resulted in savings of overUSD 2 million for BEL. The case traces the journey of WCS into business transformation consulting, outlines the solution framework proposed by WCS, and discusses the decisive nature of the Brigade project for WCS' growth trajectory. Expected learning outcomes The case has been written with the following objectives, to: familiarize students with the processes and phases of a business transformation project; examine transformation barriers and challenges from a consultant perspective; and providestudents an appreciation of the complexities and challenges, decisional criteria and parameters of a large-scale, integrated business transformation exercise. Supplementary materials Teaching notes are available; please consult your librarian for access.
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Dillian, Carolyn, Nick Klein, Howard Gillette, Christopher T. Baer, Timothy Hack, John Marchetti, and Stanley B. Winters. "Reviews in New Jersey History." New Jersey History 125, no. 1 (July 5, 2010): 48–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.14713/njh.v125i1.1022.

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<p>Carolyn Dillian reviews Amy Schutt, <em>Peoples of the River Valleys: The Odyssey of the Delaware Indians</em></p><p>Nick Klein reviews D. W. Jones, <em>Mass Motorization and Mass Transit: An American History and Policy Analysis</em></p><p>Howard Gillette reviews Daniel Sidorick, <em>Condensed Capitalism: Campbell Soup and the Pursuit of Cheap Production in the Twentieth Century</em></p><p>Christopher T. Baer reviews Anthony J. Bianculli, <em>Iron Rails in the Garden State: Tales of New Jersey Railroading</em></p><p>Timothy Hack reviews Thomas P. Slaughter, <em>The Beautiful Soul of John Woolman, Apostle of Abolition</em></p><p>John Marchetti reviews Bradley M. Gottfried, <em>Kearny’s Own: The History of the First New Jersey Brigade in the Civil War</em></p><p>Stanley B. Winters reviews John B. Wefing, <em>The Life and Times of Richard J. Hughes: the Politics of Civility</em></p><p> </p>
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Duder, C. J. D. "The settler response to the Indian Crisis of 1923 in Kenya: Brigadier general Philip Wheatley and ‘direct action’." Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 17, no. 3 (May 1989): 349–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03086538908582797.

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Barman, Roderick J. "David G. Newsom. The Soviet Brigade in Cuba: A Study in Political Diplomacy. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1987, xiv, 122 pp. $25.00 (cloth), $7.95 (paper)." Canadian-American Slavic Studies 24, no. 3 (1990): 325–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/221023990x00066.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Indian Brigade"

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Maurice, Eric. ""Send Forward Some Who Would Fight": How John T.Wilder and His "Lightning Brigade" of Mounted Infantry Changed Warfare." Digital Commons @ Butler University, 2016. http://digitalcommons.butler.edu/grtheses/416.

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The 17th Indiana Volunteer Regiment was part of “Wilder’s Lightning Brigade”, a mounted infantry brigade under Col. John T. Wilder. Through his efforts he mounted his infantry on horseback and equipped them with Spencer Repeating Rifles. This paper argues that these changes were deliberate on the part of John T. Wilder rather than emulating others, led to a conscious and noticeable change in tactics, that these changes were effective, and examines the Brigade’s influences on future military tactics. Through the use a various Primary and Secondary sources, with heavy emphasis placed on diaries, letters, unit histories, and drill manuals, I show that the changes made were deliberate, noticed by the men and their adversaries, highly effective, and an early example of future forces like mechanized infantry.
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Crocker, Jared Anthony. "An Average Regiment: A Re-Examination of the 19th Indiana Volunteer Infantry of the Iron Brigade." Thesis, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/1805/11067.

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Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)
The 19th Indiana Volunteer Infantry Regiment is one of the most famous regiments of the Civil War through its membership in the Iron Brigade of the Union Army of the Potomac. This brigade has been hailed as an elite unit of the Civil War. This thesis is a regimental history which critically examines the socio-economic profile of the 19th Indiana and the combat record of the Iron Brigade. This thesis finds that the 19th Indiana is largely reflective of the rest of the Union Army in terms of its socio-economic profile. Also, the combat record of the brigade was not overly successful and not necessarily deserving of being singled out from among the hundreds of other brigades in the Civil War.
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Books on the topic "Indian Brigade"

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Karim, Afsir. The story of the Indian airborne troops. New Delhi: Lancer, 1993.

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Anil Shorey. The fantastic fifth: A history of the oldest Indian Infantry Brigade. New Delhi: Force Multipliers, 2005.

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The Gurkha connection: A history of the Gurkha recruitment in the British Indian Army. Jaipur, India: Nirala Publications, 1994.

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Rathaur, Kamal Raj Singh. The British and the brave: A history of the Gurkha recruitment in the British Indian Army. Jaipur: Nirala Publications, 1987.

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James, Harold. Across the threshold of battle: Behind Japanese Lines with Wingate's Chindits - Burma 1943. Sussex, England: Book Guild, 1993.

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Wingate and the Chindits: Redressing the balance. London: Cassell, 2000.

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Orde Wingate: Irregular soldier. London: Phoenix Giant, 1998.

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Elder, Jason. The outcast brigade. New York: Dorchester Pub., 2000.

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Hubbard, L. Ron. Buckskin Brigades. Los Angeles, CA: Bridge Publications, 1998.

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Ron, Hubbard L. Buckskin Brigades. Los Angeles: Bridge Publications, 1987.

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Book chapters on the topic "Indian Brigade"

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Pandey, Uma Shanker. "The later adventurers and the French brigades." In European Adventurers in North India, 65–103. Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2019.: Routledge India, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429317668-3.

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Weddle, Kevin J. "Laying the Groundwork." In The Compleat Victory:, 86–101. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195331400.003.0006.

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This chapter discusses the preparation in Canada for Burgoyne’s expedition south to Albany. It introduces the key British leaders for the campaign including Major General William Phillips, Major General Friedrich Riedesel, and Brigadier General Simon Fraser, and the army’s organization. It also discusses the issues surrounding the use of German troops and Indian auxiliaries. Burgoyne’s overconfidence and disregard of Howe’s letter confirming that he was taking his army to Philadelphia and not up the Hudson River to Albany is covered at length. Finally, the logistics preparation for the campaign and the critical shortage of transport—horses, oxen, and carts—is covered in depth.
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Biberman, Yelena. "Saving the House of Islam." In Gambling with Violence, 37–63. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190929961.003.0003.

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This chapter describes the alliances between the Pakistani state and nonstate actors during the 1971 counterinsurgency campaign in the country’s eastern wing. The Pakistani army enlisted the help of nonstate allies to tilt the local balance of power in its favor, but only when it was able to satisfy their varied interests. Thousands of Razakars (civilian “volunteers”) joined the counterinsurgency because of the patronage and protection the state was able to offer once it regained some footing in the region. The activists, notably the members of the Jamaat-e-Islami’s youth wing comprising the al-Badr Brigade, became allies only after the Pakistani army built robust links with Islamist organizations and made a credible commitment to the Islamist agenda. In September 1971, even though Pakistan was clearly losing the war to the insurgents (and India), the activists created a death squad targeting high-profile supporters and sympathizers of the secessionist movement.
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Weddle, Kevin J. "Not to Make a Ticonderoga of It." In The Compleat Victory:, 178–94. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195331400.003.0013.

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This chapter discusses the 21-day British siege of Fort Stanwix and its small American garrison that guarded access to the Mohawk River. Brigadier General Barry St. Leger’s 1,800-man force made up of regulars and Indians, besieged the fort on their way to Albany in support of Burgoyne’s main army. This was an important part of Burgoyne’s overall plan. The American garrison led by Peter Gansevoort and Marinus Willett withstood this long siege despite being outnumbered almost 4 to 1. The American response to this siege, and the actions of the leaders, was in stark contrast to what occurred a month before at Fort Ticonderoga.
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Weddle, Kevin J. "Battle of Bennington." In The Compleat Victory:, 236–57. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195331400.003.0017.

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This chapter discusses the pivotal Battle of Bennington and its impact on the Saratoga campaign. Once Burgoyne moved from Fort Edward to Fort Miller, he ordered a large detachment of predominately German soldiers under Lieutenant Colonel Friedrich Baum to march to Bennington to capture cattle and other urgently needed supplies. Baum’s force was caught and destroyed by Americans led by Brigadier General John Stark. A relief force led by Heinrich Breymann was unsuccessful and escaped with heavy casualties. With this disaster, Burgoyne lost over 10% of his army, and most of his Indians left after the battle, which severely hurt his ability to gather intelligence. At this point, Burgoyne was faced with perhaps the most momentous decision of the campaign: continue to march to Albany or fall back to Ticonderoga. Despite the loss at Bennington and St. Leger’s failure at Stanwix, Burgoyne decided to push on.
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Snape, Michael. "‘Marching as to War’." In A Church Militant, 37—C1.P139. Oxford University PressOxford, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192848321.003.0002.

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Abstract This chapter surveys the emergence and growth of the Anglican Communion in the latter half of the nineteenth century and the interactions, orientation, and widely touted mission of this Anglophone (and, for many Anglican apologists, emphatically Anglo-Saxon) Communion around the turn of the twentieth century. In light of the ‘Anglo’ and imperial identity of Anglicanism, it examines its close association with the British Army and the Royal Navy, illustrating the historic (even growing) ascendancy of Anglican influence, the vigour of Anglican pastoral work among soldiers and sailors, and the increasing significance of Anglican links with the armed forces at a local level, in the garrison towns of Great Britain and in the missionary context of British India. It examines the gathering strength of ‘Christian militarism’ in the late Victorian period and expressions of military culture within the Church of England and Church of Ireland on the eve of the First World War, reflected in the rise of the Church Army, the St John Ambulance movement, the Church Lads’ Brigade, and the Ulster Volunteer Force. It also discusses how the English Church came to dominate the fledgling military forces of the settler colonies (or Dominions) and elucidates how the Protestant Episcopal Church established its pre-eminent position in the armed forces of the United States. Finally, it draws attention to the importance of Britain’s armed forces as a site for Anglican party conflict, the solutions that were found for this problem, and their consequences following the outbreak of the First World War.
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Conference papers on the topic "Indian Brigade"

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OLIVEIRA, Nayara Romero, Cristiane Rampinelli ZANELLA, André Celestino MARTINS, Sara Rodrigues Duarte MONTENEGRO, Alessandro Luiz Rocha de OLIVEIRA, Yemcy Calcina FLORES, Luis Alberto dos SANTOS, Carla Cristina Almeida LOURES, and Fausto SILVESTRI. "Produção e caracterização do pó de conchas de moluscos marinhos: Nodipecten nodosos e Crassostrea gigas." In I Simpósio de bolsistas da FIPERJ. Fundação Instituto de Pesca do Estado do Rio de Janeiro - FIPERJ, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.57068/simposio.fiperj.356.

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Na Baia da Ilha Grande a malacocultura é uma importante atividade econômica praticada comercialmente desde o início dos anos 90. As conchas dos moluscos são resíduos desta cultura e podem ser aproveitados, agregando valor à produção. Sabe-se que as conchas desses moluscos são compostas majoritariamente por carbonato de cálcio, o que indica um enorme potencial para utilização na agricultura como corretivos de acidez de solo. Isto posto, realizou-se a descrição da produção e a caracterização física do pó de conchas provenientes da maricultura de duas espécies diferentes de moluscos bivalves, a vieira (Nodipecten nodosus) e a ostra japonesa (Crassostrea gigas). As amostras de conchas foram doadas pela Fazenda Marinha da Brigada Mirim, localizada na Ilha Grande (Angra dos Reis/RJ), sendo dois quilos de cada espécie em fase adulta. Inicialmente, as conchas foram lavadas com jato de água para retirar os resíduos de areia e matéria orgânica, posteriormente com escovas de aço e em seguida submetidas a uma solução de água com NaClO 20% por 24 horas. Após esta etapa, as amostras foram novamente lavadas com água corrente abundante e, por fim, com água destilada. Em seguida, as amostras foram secadas em estufa a 100°C durante 1 hora. Após a secagem, as conchas foram inicialmente quebradas com auxílio de um martelo manual, e colocadas em um moinho de bolas, com esferas de aço, durante 20 minutos com rotação de 50 rpm, para realizar sua cominuição. Para realizar a caracterização o material obtido foi classificado em peneiras com tamanho de malha 1,70 mm, 0,850 mm e 0,300 mm, respectivamente, resultando porções do material com granulometrias distintas. Adicionalmente, foi realizada a medida de massa específica por picnômetria para determinação de densidade absoluta das amostras. Os resultados indicaram que a metodologia empregada para a produção do pó de conchas acarretou um rendimento de 81,45% para o pó de vieiras e 43,29% para o pó de ostras. Com relação à caracterização do material processado após o peneiramento observaram-se as frações 78,2%, 64,3% e 46,9% para o pó de conchas de vieiras e 74,4%, 50,8% e 17,8% para o pó de conchas de ostras. Os resultados de densidade absoluta observados para o pó de conchas de vieira e ostras foram, respectivamente, 2,3171g/cm³ e 2,444g/cm³. De maneira geral a metodologia utilizada apresentou uma maior eficiência quando aplicada às conchas de N. nodosus.
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