Academic literature on the topic 'Japan Izumi'

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Journal articles on the topic "Japan Izumi"

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YOKOYAMA, Shunji, and Jiro HADA. "Gravitational creep folds in the Izumi Group of the Izumi Mountains, southwest Japan." Landslides 26, no. 3 (1989): 10–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.3313/jls1964.26.3_10.

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Seike, Kazuma, Hideki Iwano, Tohru Danhara, and Hiromichi Hirano. "Tectonics of the Ryoke-Izumi belt of the Izumi Mountains, Southwest Japan from thermochronological data." Journal of the Geological Society of Japan 119, no. 12 (2013): 759–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.5575/geosoc.2013.0053.

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Kase, Tomoki. "Late Cretaceous gastropods from the Izumi Group of southwest Japan." Journal of Paleontology 64, no. 4 (July 1990): 563–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022336000042608.

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The basal part of the Upper Cretaceous, mid-Campanian to Maastrichtian Izumi Group of the Izumi Mountains and Awaji Island, Southwest Japan, contains the most diverse gastropod fauna of this age in Japan. This paper discriminates 19 species and describes two new genera: Atira tricarinata n. sp., Ataphrus (s.s.) sp. A, Ataphrus (s.s.) sp. B, Globularia (s.s.) izumiensis n. sp., Lysis izumiensis n. sp., Trichotropis? sp., Deussenia takinoikensis n. sp., Volutilithes antiqua n. sp., Pseudoperissitys bicarinata Nagao and Otatume, Nekewis sp., Nipponitys inouei n. gen. and sp., Nipponitys acutangularis n. gen. and sp., Nipponitys sp. cf. N. magna (Kalishevitsch), Calorebama cretacea n. sp., Taniella japonica n. gen. and sp., Amuletum (s.s.) sp., Biplica osakensis n. sp., Biplica sphaerica n. sp., and Cylichna sp. The family Ampullospiridae is assigned to the suborder Architaenioglossa from the superfamily Naticacea. The enigmatic genus Lysis is tentatively assigned to the Calyptraeidae. Taniella japonica n. sp. is the oldest member of the family Olividae, and Calorebama cretacea n. sp. is the oldest member of the subfamily Pseudolivinae. Occurrence of Atira, Ataphrus, Biplica, and five perissityids further supports close communication of the northwestern Pacific Late Cretaceous gastropod faunas with those of the North American Pacific coastal areas.
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Seike, Kazuma, and Hiromichi Hirano. "Organic maturation and burial history models of the Upper Cretaceous Izumi Group in the Izumi Mountains, Southwest Japan." Journal of the Geological Society of Japan 119, no. 6 (2013): 397–409. http://dx.doi.org/10.5575/geosoc.2013.0008.

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Widiandari, Arsi. "SERVICE OVERTIME DAN KAROSHI : KONSEKUENSI DARI ETOS KERJA JEPANG." IZUMI 4, no. 2 (March 17, 2016): 24. http://dx.doi.org/10.14710/izumi.4.2.24-31.

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After defeated on World War II, Japan economy has recover and become one of developed country in Asia. One of the factor that give contribute to Japanese economy rising is Japanese spirit. Company usually teached work culture to every worker that can be seen from Japanese work ethic. For example ideology of Family Methaphore, Shushin Koyo seido (Lifetime employment) Nenko Joretsu ( Salary based on seniority ) and Kigyou betsu Kumiai (Union based on corporation). The work culture practice in Japan company has had positive and negative consequences. As we know, that it has great contributed to Japanese economy development it self. But, it also bring a number of social problem especially to many workers. Service overtime and Karoshi are the example of the consequences of Japan work ethic practice until nowadays. Worker are expected to give their deducation and loyality to job company. This paper will try to give explanation about the consequences of Japan work ethic practice in Japan.
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Mulyadi, Budi. "The Uniqueness of The Early Childhood Education System in Japan." IZUMI 9, no. 1 (June 1, 2020): 75–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.14710/izumi.9.1.75-82.

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(Title: The Uniqueness of The Early Childhood Education System in Japan) This study is entitled the uniqueness of the early childhood education system in Japan. The main objective of this research is to find out about some of the uniqueness of the early childhood education system in Japan that is different from other countries. This research is a type of literature study that only relies on data from written sources such as books, journals, articles, and others. Data collection methods used in this study include classification, analysis, interpretation of synthesis and description. From the results of the study, in general, it can be described that the early childhood education system in Japan has much uniqueness. From the results of the study, in general, it can be described that the early childhood education system in Japan has much uniqueness. This uniqueness can be seen in the activities of the beginning of the new school year and how to enter kindergarten, at the entrance ceremony for new students, when doing daily activities in class, when additional activities outside the classroom and when organizing traditional Japanese cultural activities.
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Pamugari, Alpina, Yosefa Putri Tanjungsari, Ari Artadi, and Hari Setiawan. "The Development of Japan History Teaching Materials With ADDIE Method." IZUMI 9, no. 2 (December 13, 2020): 200–208. http://dx.doi.org/10.14710/izumi.9.2.200-208.

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Japanese history course is one of the primary supporting knowledge for Japanese language and culture learners to understand Japan as a whole. Therefore, the Japanese Language and Culture department at Darma Persada University, providing a Nihon no Rekishi (Japan History) lecture using Japanese language textbooks of Japan History. However, based on the results of the evaluation using a questionnaire, Japanese language modules that our campus had now does not give a positive impact on student understanding. Based on this, our goal is to make Japanese History module with developing lecture materials. The development of teaching materials in the form of this module is a Research and Development (R&D) research, based on the ADDIE (Analyse, Design, Development, Implementation, Evaluation) method. First, the results of the analyse phase is improvement needed in order to be able to present knowledge that is not only useful and actual but also encourages students to think critically about Japan history. Second, the results at the design stage, a teaching module is prepared, which contains balanced explanations with pictures or mini videos. They can question about pictures or figures or events that have multiple perspectives for discussed with teacher in lectures. Third, in the development stage, based on the results of analysing and design stages with consultations from leading universities in Japan experts found that at the development stage, have the results that the implementation and evaluation contents of the module are a simplification of reference literature materials, and provide several perspectives on figures and events in Japanese history.
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Djafri, Fatmawati, and Lufi Wahidati. "Study in Japan and the Motivation of Japanese Language Learners in Higher Educational Institutions in Indonesia." IZUMI 9, no. 2 (November 29, 2020): 112–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.14710/izumi.9.2.112-120.

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The number of Japanese learners in Indonesia ranks the second largest in the world after China. In addition to great interest in Japanese popular culture products, such as anime and manga, the enthusiasm of Japanese learners to study in Japan has become one of the main motivations for learning the Japanese language. The changing in educational policy implemented by the Japanese government has also offered a new possibility for study in Japan. This study aims to explain how the motivation to study in Japan was cultivated through the process of Japanese language learning in higher educational institutions in Indonesia. Researchers collected data using a set of a questionnaire distributed to Japanese language learners at designated universities and interviews with some of the respondents. This study focused on three issues: factors that motivate students to choose Japanese language study programs in university, language skills that learners want to develop in university, and their interest in studying in Japan. The result showed that interest in the Japanese language was the primary motivation for many learners to continue their study in higher educational institutions. The ability to communicate with native Japanese speakers was a significant achievement for a Japanese learner, but at the same time, it was a difficult task to achieve. Study in Japan provided an opportunity for learners to improve their Japanese language skills and to gain experience in Japan. These things were expected to increase the value of learners’ cultural capital and access to previously unobtainable resources.
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Iqbal, Chadijah Isfariani. "BUDAYA POPULER GAME POKEMON GO SEBAGAI SOFT DIPLOMACY JEPANG." IZUMI 5, no. 2 (March 1, 2017): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.14710/izumi.5.2.1-9.

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Pokemon Go is a smartphone game that blends the real and digital worlds, tasking players with exploring their neighborhoods to find creatures and treasure for in-game use. This research describes the ways Japan uses its soft power in international coorporation relations, particulary through Pokemon Go’s game. Based on Joseph S. Nye, Jr, the soft power defined as the ability of country to achieve its goal using cultural attraction rather than coercion and violence. After the World War II, Japan has tried to change its image as war crime through popular culture, such as anime, manga and cosplay. According to Nye, Japan has more potential resources in soft power compared to the other countries. This research is focus on Popular Culture of Pokemon Go’s Game as Japan’s Soft Diplomacy. Pokemon Go is one of Japan’s cultural diplomacy activities and the other countries uses popular culture to strengthen the positive image of Japan in the international world. The development of popular culture as a soft power and soft diplomacy also a diplomacy tool of development that can be used by Japan in conducting foreign policy in relation to international cooperation.
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Fadli, Zaki Ainul, and Femiga Salsa Nabila. "Kontrol Informal dan Formal Terhadap Yakuza di Jepang." IZUMI 8, no. 2 (December 6, 2019): 145. http://dx.doi.org/10.14710/izumi.8.2.145-152.

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(Title: Informal and Formal Controls Against Yakuza in Japan) This research explores how far yakuza's development in Japan and to find social factors which affecting its change. The methods used are literary research. This paper discusses the implementation of formal and informal social control in Japanese society and its ties to yakuza. The fact that yakuza, as Japanese mafia, have been intervening its society for decades, is a strange phenomenon since Japan is known for its low crimes as portrayed on most of the media. The formal control section will be focused on the National Police Agency of Japan, while the informal control section will be focused on Japanese society, emphasizing on its culture. Both controls leave the door open for yakuza to establish power in society. This may lead to the conclusion that Japan’s social control is relatively weak.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Japan Izumi"

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Bardy, Yannick. "Sanctuaires Shintô et Sociétés Locales dans le Japon de l’Epoque d’Edo : l’exemple de la province d’Izumi." Thesis, Paris, INALCO, 2013. http://www.theses.fr/2013INAL0014/document.

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Dans ce travail, nous nous proposons d'étudier des groupes de villages de la provinces d'Izumi durant l'époque d'Edo (1600 - 1868), afin de mettre en avant des types d'organisations sociales sortant des cadres institutionnels connus ainsi que les particularismes des localités étudiées.Ces ensembles de villages étant liés à la présence d'un sanctuaire commun (en plus des sanctuaires propres à chaque village ou hameau), nous partirons des relations établis entre ces établissements religieux et les groupes de villages qui leur sont liés, explorant le mode d’organisation des fidèles, leurs interactions avec les autorités seigneuriales ou shogunales. Nous nous intéresserons également à la structure interne du sanctuaire et les rôles des différents desservants, prêtres shintô et moine bouddhistes, notamment au travers des disputes qui les déchirent. Cela nous amènera également à nous interroger sur le rôle des organisations religieuses et tout particulièrement celui des organisations de prêtres shintô centrées sur les maisons curiales Yoshida ou Shirakawa, qui prennent leur essor durant cette époque.C’est en ce sens que nous nous pencherons sur les sanctuaires Kasuga, Hijiri, Kaminomiya et Shimonomiya, et Ôiseki. Explorant les groupes de villages qui leurs sont liés, nous nous attacherons à mettre en avant les interactions entre quatre groupes : les fidèles, le sanctuaire, les prêtres shintô et les moines bouddhistes. Cette analyse permettra de faire ressortir particularismes locaux, modes d’organisations non-institutionnels et structures internes de ces sanctuaires
This dissertation examines several groups of villages in Izumi Province during the Edo period (1600 - 1868). It seeks to elucidate the non-institutional social organizations and unique characteristics of those villages. Each of the groups of villages examined in this study were closely linked with a particular Shintô shrine. This dissertation begins by analyzing the relationship between shrines and the groups of villages with which they were linked. It will then examine the functions performed by the parishioner organizations of each shrine, as well as the relationship between parishioner organizations, on the one hand, and the local authorities and shogunate, on the other. It will also investigate each shrine’s social structure and the role of Shintô priests and Buddhists monks. This dissertation will also highlight the range of shrine-related conflicts and disputes that occurred in Izumi Province during the Edo period. Furthermore, it will examine the role that religious organizations, such as the Yoshida and Shirakawa priestly orders, played in early modern society. Specifically, this dissertation focuses on five shrines in Izumi Province: Kasuga, Hijiri, Kaminomiya, Shimonomiya, and Ôiseki. Through an examination of those five shrines, this dissertation will study the interaction between four groups: local parishioners, Shintô shrines, Shintô priests, and Buddhist monks. Such an analysis will enable us to elucidate the unique characteristics of the villages surrounding each shrine, the various non-institutional organizations that developed in those villages, and the internal social structure of each shrine
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Giraud, Jean-Pierre. "Etude sur la mythologie d'Izumo." Paris, INALCO, 1992. http://www.theses.fr/1992INAL0018.

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Nous avons procédé à une analyse des dieux et des mythes narrés dans le cycle d'Izumo. Pour ce faire, nous avons utilisé quatre textes de référence : le "Kojiki", le "Nihonshoki", le "Izumo no kuni no fudoki", et le "Izumo no kuni no miyatsuko no kanyogoto". Les principaux mythes étaient relatés dans les deux premiers écrits, le troisième document a but surtout sociogéographique comportait néanmoins quelques légendes particulières et intéressantes ; le dernier texte très court, nous a permis d'envisager une évolution idéologique liée au besoin de stabilité du pouvoir centralisateur de l'archipel nippon. Nous avons principalement analysé la structure symbolique de tous ces mythes et cherché à les mettre en correspondance avec des éléments du rituel ; notre travail visant à retrouver en dessous des récits des grands thèmes tels le rythme agraire, la métallurgie sacrée, le processus vie/mort. .
My research subject is on the Izumo mythology. The following documents have been mainly used : 1) the first documents to be studied were : 1) the "Kojiki" and the "Nihonshoki", 2) the "Izumo no kuni no fudoki". 3) finaly : "Izumo no kuni no miyatsuko no kanyogoto". The research is not an historical one but a study of the main different Shinto myths and their symbolism
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Yamamoto, Midori. "Place names and the rediscovery of former landscapes in Izumo City and Hikawa Town, Japan." Thesis, 1992. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/2982.

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Place names in Japan are closely connected to the land where they were named. Differences between Japan and the West regarding the concept of “what is named” are introduced, and universal characteristics of place names are reviewed. Some of the unique and complex characteristics of Japanese place names are also examined. In Japan, especially since early in the Meiji Period (1 808-1 912), many traditional place names have been lost, mainly due to attempts to reduce and simplify names through local government reform. In this thesis, an analysis is made of place names collected from land registration maps issued in 1889 in Izurno City and Hikawa Town, Shimane Prefecture, Japan. Ancient physical and historical landscapes are reconstructed by investigating the distribution patterns and etymologies of place names occurring in the research area. This research shows that place names are valuable messages from the past that tell us many physical and historical features about the land of the past.
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Books on the topic "Japan Izumi"

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Japan) Izumi Shishi Hensan Iinkai (Osaka. Matsunoodera chiiki no rekishiteki sōgō chōsa kenkyū. Izumi-shi: Izumi-shi Kyōiku Iinkai, 2000.

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Kim, Tal-su. Nihon no naka no Chōsen bunka: Yamashiro, Settsu, Izumi, Kawachi hoka. Tōkyō: Kōdansha, 2001.

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Japan) Izumi Shishi Hensan Iinkai (Osaka. Makiosan Sefukuji no rekishiteki sōgō chōsa kenkyū. Izumi-shi: Izumi-shi Kyōiku Iinkai, 2001.

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Japan) Izumi Shishi Hensan Iinkai (Osaka. Matsunoodera shozō shiryō chōsa hōkokusho. Izumi-shi: Izumi-shi Kyōiku Iinkai, 1999.

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Preachers, poets, women, and the way: Izumi Shikibu and the Buddhist literature of medieval Japan. Ann Arbor, MI: Center for Japanese Studies, The University of Michigan, 2008.

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Inouye, Charles Shirō. The similitude of blossoms: A critical biography of Izumi Kyōka (1873-1939), Japanese novelist and playwright. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Asia Center, 1998.

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Hagino, Tadahachi. Dokuritsu Hohei Dai 11 Rentai (Izumi Dai 5314 Butai) Daini Chūtai shi: Ōjin Mōkyō soshite kutō Ruson no kiroku. Nagoya-shi: Dokuho Jūichi Daini Chūtaishi Kankōkai, 1990.

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Kenkyūjo, Bōsai Kagaku Gijutsu. 1997-nen 7-gatsu Kagoshima-ken Izumi-shi Hariharagawa dosekiryū saigai chōsa hōkoku: Report on the Hariharagawa debris flow disaster on July 10, 1997 in Kagoshima Prefecture, Japan. Tsukuba-shi: Kagaku Gijutsuchō Bōsai Kagaku Gijutsu Kenkyūjo, 1998.

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Kinsei Izumo Taisha no kisoteki kenkyū. Tōkyō: Taimeidō, 2002.

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Izumo Taisha: Nihon no kami-matsuri no genryū. Tōkyō-to Shinjuku-ku: Shūfūsha, 2013.

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Book chapters on the topic "Japan Izumi"

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Kodama, Kazuto. "Paleomagnetic constraints on the evolution of the upper Cretaceous Izumi basin in Shikoku, Southwest Japan." In Terrane Accretion and Orogenic Belts, 291–99. Washington, D. C.: American Geophysical Union, 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/gd019p0291.

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Kodama, Kazuto. "Paleomagnetic Study of the Upper Cretaceous Izumi Stike-Slip Basin Along the Median Tectonic Line in Southwest Japan." In Deep Structure and Past Kinematics of Accreted Terranes, 239–48. Washington, D. C.: American Geophysical Union, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/gm050p0239.

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Okada, Kazunori, Shotai Kobayashi, and Tokugoro Tsunematsu. "Prevalence of Parkinson’s Disease in Izumo City, Japan." In Basic, Clinical, and Therapeutic Aspects of Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s Diseases, 261–65. Boston, MA: Springer US, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4684-5847-3_56.

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Bardy, Yannick. "Shinto Priests and the Yoshida in Izumi Province." In Religion, Power, and the Rise of Shinto in Early Modern Japan. Bloomsbury Academic, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781350181090.ch-013.

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Itoh, Yasuto, Paul F. Green, Keiji Takemura, and Tomotaka Iwata. "Fission Track Thermochronology of Late Cretaceous Sandstones of the Izumi Group Adjacent to the Median Tectonic Line Active Fault System in Southwest Japan." In Evolutionary Models of Convergent Margins - Origin of Their Diversity. InTech, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/67962.

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"The Grand Shrines of Ise and Izumo." In Architecture and Authority in Japan, 38–73. Routledge, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203042830-9.

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Aoki, Michiko Y. "Records of the Customs and Land of Izumo." In Religions of Japan in Practice, 113–16. Princeton University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv10vm1k8.17.

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Aoki, Michiko Y. "9. Records of the Customs and Land of Izumo." In Religions of Japan in Practice, 113–16. Princeton University Press, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9780691214740-015.

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Donkai, Saori, and Chieko Mizoue. "The Public Library in an Aging Society." In Adult and Continuing Education, 874–91. IGI Global, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-5780-9.ch049.

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This chapter describes the present conditions of our aging society, with a particular focus on Japan as a typical example of such a society. In Japan, one in every four individuals is over 65 years of age, and one in eight is over 75 years of age. Further, based on this demographic change to an older population, this chapter discusses a new library service designed to enhance the lives of elderly citizens. The authors explore this new service from the viewpoint of lifelong learning, utilizing the results of recent government surveys and some case studies, such as those done at the Izumo City Hikawa Library and the Akita Prefectural Library in Japan. Although the elderly have been placed within the category of “disabled library patrons,” in recent years, it has become more common to consider the elderly, as a whole, as an individual service category. We should, in the near future, pay more attention to supporting elderly citizens at public libraries to engage them in the development and maintenance of their own communities.
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Boer, Elisabeth de. "The classification of the Japonic languages." In The Oxford Guide to the Transeurasian Languages, 39–58. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198804628.003.0005.

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The chapter starts with an overview of the history of dialect classification in Japan. A puzzling aspect of the distribution pattern of the Japanese dialects is the fact that many features, which cannot all be explained as retentions or simplifications, recur in geographically distant areas. These similarities have been commonly but unsatisfyingly regarded as the result of parallel independent developments. Phonological (including tonal), morphological, and lexical features are selected to illustrate the splits that result in the different branches of Japonic. Based on shared innovations, the new classification at the end of the chapter proposes a Izumo-Tōhoku branch, as well as a Kyūshū-Ryūkyū branch.
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Conference papers on the topic "Japan Izumi"

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Noda, Atsushi, and Daisuke Sato. "FORMATION AND FILLING PROCESSES OF A FOREARC BASIN IN RESPONSE TO MIGRATION OF A TRIPLE JUNCTION: THE UPPER CRETACEOUS IZUMI GROUP, SOUTHWESTERN JAPAN." In GSA Annual Meeting in Seattle, Washington, USA - 2017. Geological Society of America, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2017am-301052.

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Yoshikawa, Hideki, Kenichi Ueno, Takashi Honda, Shingo Yamaguchi, and Mikazu Yui. "Analysis of the Excavated Archaeological Iron Using Xray-CT." In ASME 2003 9th International Conference on Radioactive Waste Management and Environmental Remediation. ASMEDC, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/icem2003-4776.

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In order to evaluate the long-term corrosion behavior of carbon steel, we investigated the rust of archaeological iron buried in soil. It is difficult to obtain experimental data of the long-term corrosion in the laboratory. However, it is possible to obtain corrosion data over several hundred years by using archaeological iron and to develop a reliable model for the long-term corrosion behavior by using such natural analogue data. Since these archaeological samples are very rare and important, we can not get agreement to destroy it for analysis. The rust of the sample has been analyzed no-destructively and quantitatively using high-power X-ray computed tomography. The X-ray strength was developed in the two-demensional image. We observed a rust layer distinct from the inner iron metal as a main body by using X-ray map element concentration. A mass-balance quantity of rust calculation was performed from the amount of corroded layer. A sample of axe which was excavated in the Izumo-Taisha-ruin (Shimane prefecture) was analyzed by using the method. The region in Izumo is famous as the production area of the iron from ancient times in Japan. The axe is traditional Japanese type, made of iron, and probably used for a foundation ceremony of the building. The sample has been buried under the column of the shrine and enveloped by clay. It is assumed that the axe remained under reducing conditions until its discovery in 2001 for about 750 years. We have also investigated the corrosion of the gas pipe buried in the soil in several decades as natural analogue study. By the comparison of these data with the corrosion data of water pipe (cast iron) buried in clay soil at most for 100 year, the results of this study do not exceed the extrapolated pitting corrosion depth based on the corrosion depth of the cast iron pipe.
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