Academic literature on the topic 'West Township'

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Journal articles on the topic "West Township"

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Kennedy, John James. "From the Tax-for-Fee Reform to the Abolition of Agricultural Taxes: The Impact on Township Governments in North-west China." China Quarterly 189 (March 2007): 43–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0305741006000798.

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Over the last decade, there have been numerous reports of rural discontent and unrest over excessive local taxes and fees known as villagers' burdens. In response, the central government enacted the tax-for-fee reform (TFR) in 2002 that abolished local fees levied on individuals and rural households in favour of a single agricultural tax. In addition the central government has announced plans to eliminate the agricultural tax as well after 2006. The aim of the TFR is to streamline local revenue collection and establish a more transparent and efficient provision of services. The immediate result, however, is a dramatic reduction in the autonomy of township governments as well as the provision of local services. Poorer townships have become more dependent on county government for revenues, and these townships function more like county administrative units than local self-governments. Moreover, many services have also been cut due to a lack of local revenues. In north-west China, there has been a sharp decline in the provision of educational and medical services. The solution is an increase in county remittances, but these are slow and uneven, and the combination of reduced autonomy and services has produced a number of “administrative shells” at the township level. If the inefficacy continues, then there may be even greater rural discontent and unrest over the loss of basic services than there was over increasing villagers' burdens.
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Chirkova, Katia, Yiya Chen, and Tanja Kocjančič Antolík. "Xumi (part 2): Upper Xumi, the variety of the upper reaches of the Shuiluo river." Journal of the International Phonetic Association 43, no. 3 (November 4, 2013): 381–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0025100313000169.

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This Illustration focuses on the variety of the Xumi language (旭米, /LPʂuketɕɜ/ or /EPʂu-hĩ ketɕɜ/) that is spoken in the upper reaches of the Shuiluo river (水洛河) in Shuiluo Township (水洛乡) (hereafter Upper Xumi). The township is located in Muli Tibetan Autonomous County (木里藏族自治县, smi li rang skyong rdzong in Written Tibetan, hereafter, WT), in the South-West of Sichuan Province (四川省) in the People's Republic of China.
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Collins, John. "The early history of West African highlife music." Popular Music 8, no. 3 (October 1989): 221–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0261143000003524.

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Highlife is one of the myriad varieties of acculturated popular dance-music styles that have been emerging from Africa this century and which fuse African with Western (i.e. European and American) and islamic influences. Besides highlife, other examples include kwela, township jive and mbaqanga from South Africa, chimurenga from Zimbabwe, the benga beat from Kenya, taraab music from the East African coast, Congo jazz (soukous) from Central Africa, rai music from North Africa, juju and apala music from western Nigeria, makossa from the Cameroons and mbalax from Senegal.
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Mitra, Deblina, and Suranjana Banerji. "Urban hydrodynamics in the planned township of New Town, West Bengal, India." Applied Geography 123 (October 2020): 102277. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.apgeog.2020.102277.

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Cruickshank, John L. "Courts Leet, Constables and the Township Structure in the West Riding, 1540–1842." Northern History 54, no. 1 (January 2, 2017): 59–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0078172x.2016.1259098.

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Vosburgh, Michelle. "The Crown Lands Department, the Government, and the Settlers of McNab Township, Canada West." Ontario History 100, no. 1 (2008): 80. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1065728ar.

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Chirkova, Katia, and Yiya Chen. "Xumi (part 1): Lower Xumi, the variety of the lower and middle reaches of the Shuiluo river." Journal of the International Phonetic Association 43, no. 3 (November 4, 2013): 363–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0025100313000157.

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The Xumi 旭米 language (/EPʃʉ-hĩ ketɕɐ/ ‘the language of the Shu people’) is spoken by approximately 1,800 people who reside along the banks of the Shuiluo River (水洛河) in Shuiluo Township (水洛乡) of Muli Tibetan Autonomous County (木里藏族自治县; smi li rang skyong rdzong in Written Tibetan, hereafter, WT). This county is located in the South-West of Sichuan Province (四川省) in the People's Republic of China (see Figure 1).
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Huang, Yasheng. "How Did China Take Off?" Journal of Economic Perspectives 26, no. 4 (November 1, 2012): 147–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1257/jep.26.4.147.

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There are two prevailing perspectives on how China took off. One emphasizes the role of globalization—foreign trade and investments and special economic zones; the other emphasizes the role of internal reforms, especially rural reforms. Detailed documentary and quantitative evidence provides strong support for the second hypothesis. To understand how China's economy took off requires an accurate and detailed understanding of its rural development, especially rural industry spearheaded by the rise of township and village enterprises. Many China scholars believe that township and village enterprises have a distinct ownership structure—that they are owned and operated by local governments rather than by private entrepreneurs. I will show that township and village enterprises from the inception have been private and that China undertook significant and meaningful financial liberalization at the very start of reforms. Rural private entrepreneurship and financial reforms correlate strongly with some of China's best-known achievements—poverty reduction, fast GDP growth driven by personal consumption (rather than by corporate investments and government spending), and an initial decline of income inequality. The conventional view of China scholars is right about one point—that today's Chinese financial sector is completely state-controlled. This is because China reversed almost all of its financial liberalization sometime around the early to mid 1990s. This financial reversal, despite its monumental effect on the welfare of hundreds of millions of rural Chinese, is almost completely unknown in the West.
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Ma, Libang, Xijuan Cui, Yao Yao, and Shichun Liu. "Gradient Difference of Structure of Rural Construction Land in Loess Hilly Region: A Case Study of Yuzhong County, Gansu Province, China." Land 10, no. 4 (March 31, 2021): 349. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/land10040349.

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Studying the differences in the township gradient of rural construction land structures at the microscale is beneficial for the adjustment of rural construction land structure based on local conditions and differentiation, for the classification and guidance of the scientific planning and management of rural construction land, and for improving the level of intensive use of rural construction land. In this study, we took 268 administrative villages of Yuzhong County in the Loess Hilly Region as the research object and conducted research on the internal structure and gradient difference of rural construction land from two aspects: quantitative structure and spatial layout. The main conclusions are as follows: (1) the distribution of rural construction land has significant connection with the river and road. The land structure of the county is simple, with large differences in area and uneven quantities between different types; (2) the shape of a rural construction land patch is complicated, with a high degree of fragmentation. The spatial agglomeration is not significant, and there is a significant difference between “east-west-north-south” in space; (3) the rural construction land has a significant gradient effect at the township level. In terms of quantitative structure, the closer the construction land is to key towns and central towns, the more complex the construction land, the higher the information entropy as well as the equilibrium degree, and the lower the dominant degree. Moreover, the spatial layout shows an upward trend in the fractal dimension, fragmentation degree and separation degree when the level of the township decreases.
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Idowu, OluwatobiOlalekan, OlufisayoT Aribaba, AdeolaOlukorede Onakoya, Adekunle Rotimi-Samuel, KareemOlatunbosun Musa, and FolasadeBolanle Akinsola. "Presbyopia and near spectacle correction coverage among public school teachers in Ifo Township, South-West Nigeria." Nigerian Postgraduate Medical Journal 23, no. 3 (2016): 132. http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/1117-1936.190342.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "West Township"

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Grafton, Denise U. "An investigation of levels of rurality in southwestern Ontario, a local study of hay and West Nissouri townships." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1999. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk2/ftp03/MQ39828.pdf.

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Vipond, Prudence Margaret. "The landscape and settlement of south-west Cheshire : a case study of seventeen townships in the Dee Valley." Thesis, University of Liverpool, 2000. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.366972.

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Mofokeng, Tshwinyane Jayson. "The role of the agricultural and agro-processing sectors in reducing unemployment and poverty in the townships of Lesedi / Tshwinyane Jayson Mofokeng." Thesis, North-West University, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/10394/2359.

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Hinault, Catherine. "Catholiques et protestants dans le sud-ouest du Québec,des années 1830 à 1920." Thesis, Paris 3, 2011. http://www.theses.fr/2011PA030209.

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L’interculturation est constitutive de l’histoire du Québec. Ce travail analyse les phénomènes d’interculturation entre populations catholiques et protestantes dans le Sud-Ouest du Québec, des années 1830 à 1920, notamment à travers le prisme du discours et des pratiques de la communauté protestante francophone, alors en expansion. Avant de proposer une typologie des individus qui optèrent pour le protestantisme évangélique dans cet environnement rural, nous avons étudié les voies qu’ils prirent pour y accéder et les raisons de cette acculturation choisie, perçue par la majorité comme une transgression. Nous montrons ensuite les divers degrés d’imbrication entre cette conversion et l’ethos victorien du temps en insistant sur la loyauté envers l’Empire britannique d’une majorité de Canadiens français protestants, posture complexe et polémique dans un contexte colonial. Nous tentons enfin de faire apparaître les zones de rencontres et les interactions interconfessionnelles entre ces individus de confession et de langue différente, territoire peu exploré de l’interculturation au quotidien, dans le but de réévaluer l’idée répandue que le seul mode d’interaction de ces populations ait été conflictuel ou au mieux, coexistentiel
Cross-cultural relationships, complete with conflictual overtones and strategic dealings, have been part and parcel of the fabric of Quebec history. This work sets out to analyse these crosscultural phenomena at work in Catholic and Protestant relationships in South-Western Quebec from the 1830’s to 1920, mainly through the lens of the growing French-Protestant community. Before offering a typology of those who opted for Evangelical Protestantism in this rural context, I have first thoroughly gone through the ways of the process of conversion/acculturation as experienced by those who dared transgress confessional boundaries and the reasons why they chose to do so. I have then argued that this conversion was, to a higher or lesser degree, closely intertwined with the then prevailing Victorian ethos, and overwhelmingly translated into a staunch loyalty towards the British empire, a complex and controversial posture to adopt for any French Canadian in that colonial context. Particular attention was finally paid to the relations between Catholics and Protestants, French and English-speaking, as they lived their lives from day-to-day, in an attempt to appraise the prevailing idea that these relations were perenially conflictual or at best, on a footing of reciprocated indifference
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Gasennelwe, Potlako. "Understanding the township property market: the case of Orlando East, Diepkloof and Orlando West Soweto." Thesis, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/10539/11761.

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Reports of the Banking Association of South Africa (BASA) and Finmark Trust in 2004 -2005 pointed out that two housing sub-markets exist in South Africa. The first housing sub-market, consisting of properties of which the price is above R200, 000.00 is prospering. However, the second sub-housing market, comprising of RDP houses and older properties in the townships, is inefficient and ineffective. Orlando East, Diepkloof and Orlando West and are older parts of Soweto, which in principle are ranked as being part of the second housing sub-market, experience a different phenomenon from what is generally assumed about the second housing market. Orlando East, Diepkloof and Orlando West appear to have been experiencing a partial property boom. This research report aims at exploring factors stimulating this property boom. It examines the role of the political will of theAfrican National Congress (ANC) to create a suitable environment for private sector involvement in Orlando East, Orlando West and Diepkloof, of the improvement of infrastructure through the creation of new centers such as shopping malls, and of partnerships between the public and private sector.
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Books on the topic "West Township"

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Taylor, Vivian F. Tombstone inscriptions in Montgomery County, Pa.: West Norriton Township. Norristown, Pa. (1654 DeKalb St., Norristown 19401): Historical Society of Montgomery County, Pa., 1985.

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MacAdam, Henry Innes. West Windsor, then and now: Commemorating the bicentennial of West Windsor Township, 1797-1997. Princeton, NJ: Princton Corridor Rotary Club, 1997.

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Chaffer, Kenneth. Township of Guiseley, West Riding of Yorkshire, 1794 and 1796. [Harrogate?]: The Author, 1990.

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Haynes, Lyle R. 1901 census of Canada: West Flamborough Township, Wentworth County, Ontario. Mississauga, Ont: Smokey Hollow Publications, 1998.

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Blair, Ella. Lest we forget: The veterans of Huntley Township. Carp, Ont: Huntley Township Historical Society, 2005.

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Dalton, Mary Haynes. West Bend (Little Yadkin Township) North Carolina: Historical records and memories. [Winston-Salem, N.C.]: M.H. Dalton, 2005.

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Hughes, Alice M. Index to the 1851 census of Canada West, Lanark County, Montague Township. Ottawa: Ottawa Branch, Ontario Genealogical Society, 1990.

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M, Hughes Alice. Index to the 1851 census of Canada West, Grenville County, Wolford Township. Ottawa: Ottawa Branch, Ontario Genealogical Society, 1990.

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Zehner, William J. An every-name index to Zion's West Penn cemetery records: West Penn Township, Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania, 1850-1941. Lynn Haven, Fla: William J. Zehner, 2007.

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Gillespie, Paul. 1851 personal and agricultural census, Canada West, Frontenac County, Township of Wolfe Island. Portage la Prairie, Man: Wolfe Island Historical Press, 1997.

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Book chapters on the topic "West Township"

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Roy, Animesh. "Dispossession, Neoliberal Urbanism and Societal Transformation: Insight into Rajarhat New Township in West Bengal." In Land and Livelihoods in Neoliberal India, 169–93. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-15-3511-6_9.

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Griffin, Emma. "Industrial towns and townships, 1750–1840." In England's Revelry. British Academy, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197263211.003.0006.

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This chapter discusses sports and pastimes that were enjoyed in two contrasting communities in the early nineteenth century: the west Midlands and the West Riding of Yorkshire. It demonstrates the very different patterns of popular recreations that prevailed in each. The chapter also sets out to consider how such marked divergences between the cultural practices of the two regions had been formed. It explores popular recreation from the viewpoint of the regions.
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Douglas, Ian. "The Urban Geomorphology of Kuala Lumpur." In The Physical Geography of Southeast Asia. Oxford University Press, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199248025.003.0032.

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The city of Kuala Lumpur, lying at the junction of the hills of the Main Range (Banjaran Titiwangsa) of Peninsular Malaysia and the coastal plain, has many of the environmental problems that beset the urban areas of Southeast Asia. It has to cope with heavy, intense rainfalls, frequent local nuisance flooding, unstable hillsides, complex foundation conditions, and the impacts of mining and construction activities. The citizens, engineers, and planners of Kuala Lumpur have had to find ingenious solutions in order to live in harmony with their environment. While careful investigation and skilful applications of science and technology has overcome many of the problems, others remain unresolved. The persistent problems arise because the links, and thus responsibilities, associated with changes in one place and impacts elsewhere are not acknowledged and the available understanding of hydrologic and geomorphic systems is not applied. Founded by Kapitan China Yap Ah Loy at the confluence of the Gombak and Klang Rivers in 1857 as a tin-mining settlement (Gullick 1983), Kuala Lumpur quickly outgrew its floodplain and fluvial terrace site to spread onto the adjacent hills. The British resident, Captain Bloomfield Douglas, moved his headquarters to Kuala Lumpur from Klang in 1880 and soon after built his official residence on the hill to the west of the Gombak River, where the prime minister’s residence now stands. So began a tradition of the elite living on the hills which has persisted to the present day. In December 1881 the new township and the surrounding tin mines were hit by floodwaters (Gullick 1983), so establishing the problem of living with fluvial extremes which still besets the city. Virtually every wet season in the first eighty years of Kuala Lumpur’s existence brought some flooding to the town. The river channels became choked with silt carried down from the mines upstream (Gullick 1983). Record rainfall in December 1926 led to a flood 1 m deep in the town centre. After the floods, a new, wider channel, with a double trapezoidal cross-section was built through the town centre. These works enabled a major flood in 1930 to pass through the town without causing any damage (Gullick 1983).
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Conference papers on the topic "West Township"

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Liu Junwei and Li Xueru. "The role of human resource information system among township enterprises in the West China." In 2010 2nd International Conference on Information Science and Engineering (ICISE). IEEE, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icise.2010.5689300.

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Waldin, Jeremy, and Ben Baty. "Recovering the Waiho – Emergency response and recovery of the Waiho River Bailey Bridge." In IABSE Congress, Christchurch 2021: Resilient technologies for sustainable infrastructure. Zurich, Switzerland: International Association for Bridge and Structural Engineering (IABSE), 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2749/christchurch.2021.0537.

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<p>Waiho – (verb) (-ngia,-tia) <i>to let be, leave alone, put, place, ignore.</i></p><p>SH6 Waiho Bailey Bridge is located just south of Franz Josef township in the South Island of New Zealand and is a critical connection for the West Coast. The Bailey bridge was first constructed in 1990 and has since been raised and extended three times due to significant aggradation of the riverbed. During a massive storm event on March 26, 2019 the northern abutment and northern- most pier were washed out leading to collapse of several spans of the bridge. The cost caused by the loss of the bridge was estimated to be in the order of $2-3M per day. Consequently, there was intense pressure on Waka Kotahi NZ Transport Agency to restore access across the river.</p><p>As Team Leader and Deputy Team Leader of the West Coast Bridge Management Contract, Jeremy Waldin and Ben Baty led the $6.5M emergency recovery managing an emergency response team which worked across multiple organisations to recover this 170m long bridge in just 18 days.</p>
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Wong, ChongLing. "KVMRT Challenges – Elevated Viaducts and Station Structures." In IABSE Conference, Kuala Lumpur 2018: Engineering the Developing World. Zurich, Switzerland: International Association for Bridge and Structural Engineering (IABSE), 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2749/kualalumpur.2018.0791.

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<p>Malaysia’s capital city Kuala Lumpur has been experiencing urbanization growth spurts in the last two decades, in tandem with her rapid economic expansion and progress towards a developed nation. Trailing this economic trend is the need to improve and expand public transportation, particularly in the railway sector. The Klang Valley Mass Rapid Transit (KVMRT) rail transit system was conceived to meet that need and complement the existing public transportation network.</p><p>The first KVMRT metro line commonly known as the SBK line which connects Sg Buloh township in the northern-west and Kajang in the southern-east, was delivered and fully opened to the public ahead of schedule on 17 July 2017. The success of the project was achieved through significant efforts in surmounting many challenges in different aspects. This paper shares the experiences from the perspective of the Project Delivery Partner (PDP) in the planning, design and construction of the viaducts and station structures.</p>
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Eusofe, Zarulazam, and Sazali Harun. "Large Scale Infrastructure Project Implementation in Malaysia. A Case Study – Metropolitan Highways in Klang Valley: Damansara-Shah Alam Elevated Highway (DASH)." In IABSE Conference, Kuala Lumpur 2018: Engineering the Developing World. Zurich, Switzerland: International Association for Bridge and Structural Engineering (IABSE), 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2749/kualalumpur.2018.0685.

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<p>The rapid socioeconomic development in the Klang Valley has resulted in a surge of freight and passenger transport movements and an increase in demand for better quality of roads, road networks, and transport systems. Hence, the construction of the Damansara-Shah Alam Elevated Highway (DASH) project was proposed to ease traffic congestion, by efficiently dispersing the traffic coming from the surrounding townships, and by providing connectivity between the Puncak Alam catchment and the Damansara North area. The case study, namely the DASH project, will be a 16.3 km expressway traversing from Puncak Perdana in the west to Damansara Perdana in the east. The DASH project has been chosen to illustrate the various processes and challenges involved in its planning and design and in the fulfillment of its pre-construction requirements. Currently, this project is at its early stage of construction and is scheduled to be completed by August 2020.</p>
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Reports on the topic "West Township"

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Hamblin, A. P. Figure 15. West-east stratigraphic cross-section of Bearpaw-Horseshoe Canyon strata in Township 30. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/215985.

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Hamblin, A. P. Figure 16. West-east stratigraphic cross-section of Bearpaw-Horseshoe Canyon strata in Township 40. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/215986.

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Hamblin, A. P. Figure 14. West-east stratigraphic cross-section of Bearpaw-Horseshoe Canyon strata in Township 20. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/215923.

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Fowler, M. G., and L. R. Snowdon. Rock-eval/TOC data for nine west central Alberta wells (Township 58 to 69, Ranges 18W5 to 12W6). Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/209889.

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Dixon, J. Evidence for a major unconformity in Middle Triassic strata (Doig, Halfway and lowermost Charlie Lake formations) of the Grande Prairie area (Map-sheet 83 M; townships 70 to 80, ranges 1W6 to 13W6), west-central Alberta. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/214886.

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Ground-water levels in lower Paleozoic and Precambrian crystalline rocks of East Bradford and West Bradford Townships, Chester County, Pennsylvania, July and August 1987. US Geological Survey, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.3133/wri884052.

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