04156nam 22006015 450 991088780580332120250808093459.09783031682445303168244010.1007/978-3-031-68244-5(MiAaPQ)EBC31681658(Au-PeEL)EBL31681658(CKB)35980433500041(DE-He213)978-3-031-68244-5(EXLCZ)993598043350004120240918d2024 u| 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierAchieving Resilience in Service Supply Chains The Role of Procurement /by Carla Pereira, Öznur Yurt1st ed. 2024.Cham :Springer Nature Switzerland :Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan,2024.1 online resource (123 pages)Palgrave Studies in Logistics and Supply Chain Management9783031682438 3031682432 1. Introduction -- 2. Service supply chains in disruptive and uncertain markets -- 3. The role of procurement in service supply chains -- 4. Resilience in Service Supply Chains -- 5. The Role of Procurement in achieving Service Supply Chain Resilience -- 6. Practical insights and guidelines.In today’s increasingly service-oriented global economy, the activities and transactions within and between supply chain members in the service sector have experienced substantial growth. This book addresses the unique challenges faced by service businesses and emphasizing the importance of service supply chain management decisions on competitiveness and performance. By adopting a service supply chain perspective, this book offers valuable insights for defining, designing, and effectively managing service procurement processes for all stakeholders involved, such as service suppliers, service providers, and customers. This inclusive viewpoint ensures a holistic understanding of the entire service supply chain, considering the interconnected relationships and dependencies among its members. By combining scholarly insights, practical examples and guidelines, it will be of great interest to students and academics of supply chain management and procurement, as well as service supply chain managers looking for advanced strategies. Carla Pereira is a Lecturer in Operations & Supply Chain Management at the Open University, UK. She is also a visiting lecturer in the Post-Graduate Program of Civil Engineering at State University of Santa Catarina, Brazil, in the research of Urban Resilience and Lean Construction. Her research interests and recent projects are on supply chain resilience and sustainability, procurement management, strategies to deal with food waste and/or surplus food, urban resilience, and lean philosophy. Öznur Yurt is a Senior Lecturer in Operations & Supply Chain Management, at the Open University, UK. She is also Adjunct Faculty as a Full Professor of Supply Chain & Marketing at Izmir University of Economics, Turkey. Her research interests lie at the intersection of supply chain management and business-to-business marketing. Her recent research focuses on service supply chains, buyer-supplier relations, procurement management, service networks, food supply chains and sustainable supply chains.Palgrave Studies in Logistics and Supply Chain ManagementBusiness logisticsIndustrial procurementService industriesSupply Chain ManagementProcurementServicesBusiness logistics.Industrial procurement.Service industries.Supply Chain Management.Procurement.Services.658.72Pereira Carla1770914Yurt Öznur1770915MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910887805803321Achieving Resilience in Service Supply Chains4254694UNINA05954nam 22005173 450 991102605290332120240627200128.097818032758261803275820(MiAaPQ)EBC31318708(Au-PeEL)EBL31318708(CKB)31893051900041(Exl-AI)31318708(Perlego)4415217(OCoLC)1433205465(EXLCZ)993189305190004120240506d2024 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierArchaeology and Geology of Ancient Egyptian Stones1st ed.Oxford :Archaeopress,2024.©2024.1 online resource (1091 pages)Archaeopress Egyptology Series9781803275819 1803275812 Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright page -- On Writing a Reference Work -- Contents Page -- List of Figures and Tables -- Chapter 1 -- Table 1.1: Ancient Egyptian and Sudanese chronologies. -- Chapter 2 -- Figure 2.1: The rock cycle. -- Figure 2.2: Spectrum of igneous rock occurrences. -- Figure 2.3: Visual comparator for porphyritic igneous rocks. The illustration simulates the appearance of a rock with an aphanitic matrix and phenocrysts—the large white rectangles—constituting exactly 20% of the area within the square. -- Figure 2.4: IUGS mineralogical classification of plutonic (phaneritic)
igneous rocks with the feldspathoid-bearing rocks omitted. -- Figure 2.5: IUGS chemical classification of aphanitic (extrusive volcanic and intrusive subvolcanic) igneous rocks with the feldspathoid-bearing rocks omitted. -- Figure 2.6: Spectrum of sedimentary depositional environments. -- Figure 2.7: Spectrum of metamorphic rock occurrences. -- Figure 2.8: Drawing of the Turin papyrus map (redrawn from Harrell and Brown 1992a: fig. 3, 1992b: fig. 2). The map fragments are lettered according to their sequential arrangement (from left to right) as currently displayed in Turin’s Egyptian Museum. Th -- Chapter 3 -- Figure 3.1: Generalized bedrock geology map of Egypt and northern Sudan. Adapted in part from Harrell (2021a: fig. 2) and based on information from DOS (1974), EGSMA (1981), GMRD (1981), and GRAS-RRI (1988). Geological contacts are inferred where covered -- Figure 3.2: Generalized surficial geology map of Egypt and northern Sudan. Adapted in part from Harrell (2021a: fig. 3) and based on information from EGSMA (1981), GMRD (1981), and Vail (1978: fig. 8).
The graphic scale is exact only for the middle porti -- Figure 3.3: Generalized topographical map of Egypt and northern Sudan. Adapted in part from Harrell (2021a: fig. 1). The elevations come from a 30 arc-second (i.e., ~900 m ground resolution) digital elevation model (DEM GTOPO30) available from the U. S. G -- Figure 3.4: Geological map of cataracts and rapids along the Nubian reach of the Nile River in southern Egypt and northern Sudan. For rock types represented by the map patterns see the legend in Figure 3.1. Adapted from Harrell (2021a: figs. 2 and 4). -- Figure 3.5: Rotated blocks caused by an earthquake in the unfinished 12th-Dynasty sandstone temple of Qasr el-Sagha in the northern Faiyum Desert. This is probably the same 12th-Dynasty earthquake that did significant damage at Dahshur 55 km to the northe -- Figure 3.6: The northern Memnon Colossus at Kom el-Hetan (the Amenhotep III mortuary temple) on the Luxor West Bank. Visible is the late 2nd- or early 3rd-century AD Roman repair of earthquake damage (the cut and fitted blocks in the torso) to what was or -- Figure 3.7: Wooden dovetail clamp joining two sandstone blocks in the 18th-Dynasty Montu temple at Karnak.
The length of the exposed part of the clamp is 24 cm. Photograph courtesy of V. Max Brown. -- Figure 3.8. Multiple mortises with wooden dovetail clamps in a pavement of sandstone blocks in the Ptolemaic Opet shrine in the Karnak temple complex. The roughened patches are the recessed footings for other sandstone blocks. Photograph reproduced from L -- Figure 3.9: Luxor Temple with the lower halves of the columns in the Colonnade of Amenhotep III buried under sediment deposited by Nile floods. The Mosque of Abu el-Haggag is visible at left. Photograph by Frank M. Good taken between 1856 and 1860 (courte -- Figure 3.10: Damage by river erosion to the Sobek temple of Ptolemaic and Roman age at Kom Ombo. The temple sits atop an outer, cut bank of the Nile River. Photograph by Antonio Beato taken between 1860 and 1906 (courtesy of the 19th-Century Architectural -- Figure 3.11: View of Deir el-Bahri from the top of the cliff that overlooks it.
The temples visible are, from left to right, those of Hatsepshut, Thutmose III,
and Mentuhotep II. View looking east. -- Figure 3.12: The Sheikh Abd el-Qurna slump block with the Theban escarpment,
from where it slid, at left. View looking northeast.Generated by AI.This book seeks to identify and describe all the rocks and minerals employed by the ancient Egyptians using proper geological nomenclature, and to give an account of their sources in so far as they are known. The various uses of the stones are described, as well as the technologies employed to extract, transport, carve, and thermally treat them.Archaeopress Egyptology SeriesEgyptologyGenerated by AIEgypt, AncientGenerated by AIEgyptologyEgypt, Ancient932.01Harrell James A1847643MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9911026052903321Archaeology and Geology of Ancient Egyptian Stones4433560UNINA