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2005

Mining India: Sustainably for growth – A report by Ernst & Young and ASSOCHAM

MineralsThis report by Ernst & Young and ASSOCHAM on “Mining India: Sustainably for growth” gives insights into the mining sector in India and issues around capital raising, policy framework, efficiency and sustainability and provides a way forward for strategic acceleration of the benefits.

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State geology and mineral maps – Geological Survey of India Miscellaneous Publication Series

The Geological Survey of India (GSI) has been preparing state geology and mineral maps as a part of its Miscellaneous Publications series from time to time. During the span of three and a half decades since the first edition was published, enormous knowledge has been added in the sphere of geology of the areas necessitating revisions. The entire modified and updated series published at various points of time is available here.

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Map - Andhra Pradesh: State Geology and Mineral Maps – Geological Survey of India Miscellaneous Publication Series426.82 KB
Map - Chandigarh: State Geology and Mineral Maps – Geological Survey of India Miscellaneous Publication Series489.53 KB
Map - Chhattisgarh: State Geology and Mineral Maps – Geological Survey of India Miscellaneous Publication Series376.65 KB
Map - Delhi: State Geology and Mineral Maps – Geological Survey of India Miscellaneous Publication Series675.66 KB
Map - Gujarat: State Geology and Mineral Maps – Geological Survey of India Miscellaneous Publication Series149.49 KB
Map - Jammu & Kashmir: State Geology and Mineral Maps – Geological Survey of India Miscellaneous Publication Series1.14 MB
Map - Karnataka: State Geology and Mineral Maps – Geological Survey of India Miscellaneous Publication Series658.78 KB
Map - Kerala: State Geology and Mineral Maps – Geological Survey of India Miscellaneous Publication Series327.59 KB
Map - Madhya Pradesh: State Geology and Mineral Maps – Geological Survey of India Miscellaneous Publication Series526.3 KB
Map - Maharashtra: State Geology and Mineral Maps – Geological Survey of India Miscellaneous Publication Series355.78 KB
Map - Punjab: State Geology and Mineral Maps – Geological Survey of India Miscellaneous Publication Series886.2 KB
Map - Rajasthan: State Geology and Mineral Maps – Geological Survey of India Miscellaneous Publication Series1.02 MB
Map - Tamil Nadu & Pondicherry: State Geology and Mineral Maps – Geological Survey of India Miscellaneous Publication Series546.46 KB
Map - UP & Uttarakhand: State Geology and Mineral Maps – Geological Survey of India Miscellaneous Publication Series1.42 MB
Map - West Bengal: State Geology and Mineral Maps – Geological Survey of India Miscellaneous Publication Series1.81 MB
Report - Arunachal Pradesh: State Geology and Mineral Maps – Geological Survey of India Miscellaneous Publication Series537.75 KB
Report - Assam: State Geology and Mineral Maps – Geological Survey of India Miscellaneous Publication Series624.22 KB
Report - Karnataka: State Geology and Mineral Maps – Geological Survey of India Miscellaneous Publication Series352.56 KB
Report - Kerala: State Geology and Mineral Maps – Geological Survey of India Miscellaneous Publication Series502.23 KB
Report - Manipur-Mizoram-Nagaland-Tripura: State Geology and Mineral Maps – Geological Survey of India Miscellaneous Publication Series968.5 KB
Report - Tamil Nadu: State Geology and Mineral Maps – Geological Survey of India Miscellaneous Publication Series429.04 KB
Map -Tripura: State Geology and Mineral Maps – Geological Survey of India Miscellaneous Publication Series487.72 KB
Map - Manipur: State Geology and Mineral Maps – Geological Survey of India Miscellaneous Publication Series592.7 KB
Map - Nagaland: State Geology and Mineral Maps – Geological Survey of India Miscellaneous Publication Series500.24 KB
Map - Mizoram: State Geology and Mineral Maps – Geological Survey of India Miscellaneous Publication Series423.81 KB

Delhi water privatization - Background and recent developments – A FAQ note

This FAQ note deals with the background and recent developments related to Delhi water privatization. Following the adoption of the Delhi Jal Board (DJB) Act in 1998, ideas for further reforms were progressively mooted. Earlier efforts at introducing privatization in Delhi can be traced to 2002, when the DJB commissioned the Delhi Water Supply and Sewerage Project Preparation Study with the assistance of the World Bank.

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Delhi water privatization - Background and recent developments – A FAQ note (2011)64.38 KB

Location

Delhi, DL, India
Latitude: 28.635308, Longitude: 77.224960

Development flows from the barrel of a gun – A documentary by AKHRA

Directed by Biju Toppo and Meghnath, Hindi with English subtitles, 58 mins

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Location

Nagarnar, GJ, India
Latitude: 21.517719, Longitude: 70.464699

Biodrainage to combat waterlogging, increase farm productivity and sequester carbon in canal command areas of northwest India – A paper in Current Science

This paper in Current Science deals with the use of biodrainage to combat waterlogging, increase farm productivity and sequester carbon in canal command areas of northwest India. The rise in groundwater table followed by waterlogging and secondary soil salinization is a serious problem in canal-irrigated areas of arid and semi-arid regions. To combat the problem, an agroforestry model for biodrainage was tested in waterlogged fields of Haryana (northwest India), where 10 per cent area (0.44 m ha) is waterlogged resulting in reduced crop yields and abandonment of agricultural lands.

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Biodrainage to combat waterlogging, increase farm productivity and sequester carbon in canal command areas of northwest India – A paper in Current Science (2011)240.93 KB

Location

Hissar, HR, India
Latitude: 29.153070, Longitude: 75.718567

Snow and glaciers of the Himalayas – A study by Indian Space Research Organisation

Cover PageThese reports present the findings of a study on “Snow and Glacier Studies” taken up by the Space Applications Centre, Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) and executed in collaboration with fourteen research organizations and academic institutions of the country, at the behest of the Ministry of Environment and Forests.

Snow cover for the entire Indian Himalaya has been monitored for four consecutive years from 2004-05 to 2007-08. Himalayan mountains contain important natural resources of frozen fresh water in the form of snow and glaciers. These glaciers are unique as they are located in tropics, high altitude regions, predominantly valley type and many are covered with debris.

The great northern plains of India sustain on the perennial melt of snow and glaciers meeting the water requirements of agriculture, industries, domestic sector even in the months of summer when large tracts of the country go dry. Therefore, it is important to monitor and assess the state of snow and glaciers and to know the sustainability of glaciers in view of changing global scenarios of climate and water security of the nation. Any information pertaining to Himalayan glaciers is normally difficult to be obtained by conventional means due to its harsh weather and rugged terrains.

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Snow and Glaciers of the Himalayas - Discussion Paper I - ISRO-SAC (2011)40.21 MB
Snow and Glaciers of the Himalayas - Discussion Paper II - ISRO-SAC (2011)45.39 MB

Location

Manali, HP, India
Latitude: 32.240927, Longitude: 77.191650

Monitoring system for incentive programs – Learning from large-scale rural sanitation initiatives in India – A report by the Water and Sanitation Programme

WSPThis report is a part of the Global Scaling Up Rural Sanitation project of the Water and Sanitation Programme, World Bank and focuses on learning how to combine the approaches of Community Led Total Sanitation (CLTS), behavior change communications, and social marketing of sanitation to generate sanitation demand and strengthen the supply of sanitation products and services at scale, leading to improved health for people in rural areas. It is a large-scale effort to meet the basic sanitation needs of the rural people who do not currently have access to safe and hygienic sanitation. This report is one in a series of knowledge products designed to showcase project findings, assessments and lessons learned in the project.

Over the last few years, the concept of open-defecation free communities has emerged as one of the building blocks toward achieving total sanitation. The term ‘access’ is widely used to capture increase in sanitation usage. However, a clean environment is a public good. Hence, there was a need to achieve total sanitation at the community level to realize public health benefits. This has led policy makers and practitioners to adopt strategies that achieve community-wide total sanitation status, which includes the community becoming open-defecation free, and adopting safe hygiene and environmental sanitation practices.

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Monitoring system for incentive programs – Learning from large-scale rural sanitation initiatives in India – A report by the Water and Sanitation Programme (2010)1.15 MB

Location

Solan, HP, India
Latitude: 30.903960, Longitude: 77.096943

Sunderbans - A climate adaptation report by World Wildlife Fund India

SunderbansThis climate adaptation report by World Wildlife Fund India captures its experience on climate change in the Sundarbans. Beginning in 2005, WWF-India has conducted dozens of personal interviews to record how climate change impacts people's lives here and now. These perceptions demanded that scientific studies be carried out to ascertain the veracity of the claims.

The report draws heavily from the studies undertaken by the School of Oceanographic Studies, Jadavpur University at the micro-level as well as across the Indian Sundarbans. These studies made it possible to design initiatives that enhance risk preparedness as well as adaptive capacity of vulnerable communities that ensure physical and livelihood security, and reduce sensitivity in case of exposure to high intensity weather events. Not all of these were successful, for example, attempts to raise mangrove plantation. The successful ones are briefly described in the last chapter of the report.

The eco-region that forms the Sundarbans is both unique, and uniquely fragile. Unique because it is one of the most extensive mangrove forests in the world, existing in a vast deltaic region where freshwater and seawater mix. Also unique, because the human population that exists on the fringes of the coastal forest, in land that has been slowly adapted to cultivation over the last two centuries, confront challenges from both land, air, and sea that few other local populations have to contend with. And further unique, because the flora of the Sundarbans, the mangrove, presents a natural buffer, a bulwark against coastal erosion and seawater ingress into one of the most densely populated regions of the world. Ironically, the Sundarbans' fragility stems from its uniqueness.

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Location

Kolkata, WB, India
Latitude: 22.572646, Longitude: 88.363895

Lessons from non-chemical input treatments based on scientific and traditional knowledge in a long-term farming experiment - A research paper

This paper reports on a field experiment conducted at International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT) in Patancheru, where four crop-husbandry systems were studied.

Two of the four systems are low-cost farming methods which are based on traditional and scientific knowledge on using crop residues, farm-waste, compost, Gliricidia lopping, bacterial inoculants, and herbal extracts as nutrients to nourish the soil, and as biopesticides to manage pests.

The third system is conventional agriculture which is the "control" and receives chemical input as suggested by research institutions depending on crop type. The fourth is a combination of the  first three.Read More

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Lessons from nonchemical input treatments based on scientific and traditional knowledge in a long-term farming experiment - A research paper314.5 KB

Location

Patancheru, AP, India
Latitude: 17.530000, Longitude: 78.270000

Patterns of diversity and conservation status of freshwater fishes in the tributaries of river Ramganga in the Shiwaliks of the Western Himalaya – A paper in Current Science

This paper from Current Science is based on a short study undertaken from December 2004 to April 2005, to assess the species diversity and composition of freshwater fishes in three tributaries of Ramganga river in the foothills of Western Himalaya. One tributary was within a protected area (PA; Corbett National Park); the other two were outside the PA (Lansdowne Forest Division). Cast nets were used for fish sampling, which was done from 9.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m.

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Patterns of diversity and conservation status of freshwater fishes in the tributaries of River Ramganga in the Shiwaliks of the Western Himalaya – A paper in Current Science (2011)148.78 KB
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6.22-2011.07.01-06