02668nam 2200625Ia 450 991102020710332120200520144314.09786612022036978128202203412820220329783527624324352762432597835276243313527624333(CKB)1000000000687151(EBL)481561(OCoLC)391052032(SSID)ssj0000331411(PQKBManifestationID)11230629(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000331411(PQKBWorkID)10344209(PQKB)11170053(MiAaPQ)EBC481561(Perlego)2762980(EXLCZ)99100000000068715120081201d1995 uy 0gerur|n|---|||||txtccrKopplungstechniken zur Elementspeziesanalytik /Lothar Dunemann, Jutta BegerowWeinheim Wiley-Blackwell19951 online resource (240 p.)Description based upon print version of record.9783527287192 3527287191 Includes bibliographical references and index.Kopplungstechniken zur Elementspeziesanalytik; Inhalt; 1 Einleitung und Übersicht; 2 Elementspeziesanalytik (ESA); 3 Kopplungstechniken zur Elementspeziesanalytik; 4 Anwendungsgebiete der Kopplungstechniken in der ESA; 5 Zukünftige Entwicklungen; 6 Zusammenfassung und Ausblick; RegisterDie aktuellen Probleme der lokalen und globalen Umweltüberwachung erfordern schnelle und zuverlässige Strategien zurElementspeziesanalytik. Diese Analytik ist die einzige, die zum besseren Verständnis komplexer Zusammenhänge beitragen kann, da sie eine Differenzierung der Elementgehalte erlaubt. Bei der erforderlichen Kombination von Trenn- und Detektionssystemen stehen Kopplungstechniken an erster Stelle, da sie in vergleichbar kurzer Analysenzeit aussagekräftige und zuverlässige Ergebnisse liefern. Erstmals wird hier diese zukunftsweisende Technik für die Elementspeziesanalytik zTrace elementsSpeciationTrace analysisMethodologyTrace elementsSpeciation.Trace analysisMethodology.543572.515Dunemann L(Lothar)1840827Begerow Jutta1840828MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9911020207103321Kopplungstechniken zur Elementspeziesanalytik4420398UNINA04388nam 22006375 450 991104922020332120260102120540.03-032-03390-X10.1007/978-3-032-03390-1(CKB)44769967700041(MiAaPQ)EBC32471007(Au-PeEL)EBL32471007(DE-He213)978-3-032-03390-1(EXLCZ)994476996770004120260102d2026 u| 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierSeasonal Island Geographies: The Human Geography of Italian Small Islands Patterns, Challenges and Perspectives /by Stefano Malatesta, Arturo Gallia1st ed. 2026.Cham :Springer Nature Switzerland :Imprint: Springer,2026.1 online resource (213 pages)Key Challenges in Geography, EUROGEO Book Series,2522-84393-032-03389-6 Italian Small Islands -- Theoretical and interpretive keys -- The regional framework -- A focus on the Mediterranean.The geography of the Italian small islands archipelagos is shaped by a very high level of geophysical, landscape, demographic and cultural diversity. Excluding the Venetian lagoon, a case markedly distinct within the national panorama, Italy counts almost sixty inhabited islands, temporarily or permanently populated, distributed from the Adriatic-Ionian basin to a few dozen miles off the Tunisian coast. This heterogeneity makes Italian small islands, along with Dalmatia and the Aegean islands, a key region to understanding the human geography of the Mediterranean. This book points to the overarching interpretative category we will use in developing the description and analyses of Italian small islands geographies: temporality. As Peter Haggett suggested in his celebrated introduction to the concepts of human geography (the geography of the beach), our discipline deals with the humanization of spaces always taking into account the role of time as the variable through which this action takes shape. This double layer is fundamental to understand the human geography of micro-island systems. The book stresses key elements of the human geography of Italian islands (tourism, energy production, demography, connectivity, and administrative geography) by placing “seasonal politics” at the centre of the analysis. That is, the idea that the humanisation of space is strongly linked to the recursive nature of the seasons: the so-called “one-peak seasonality” (both climatic and human) that govern the set of social, cultural and economic activities framing small islands’ human geographies. This recursive seasonality becomes, the key to understanding the territorial, environmental and social policies of the Italian archipelagos. The book combines cartographic, statistical and historical sources with descriptions and insights into specific cases. The chapters frame the human geography of the Italian islands in the broader scenario of environmental and territorial policies on regional, national and European scales. Researchers in geography, social sciences, environmental sciences, economics, architecture and political science are the key audience of the book. In addition, practitioners, decision-makers and master's students may be interested in reading the volume.Key Challenges in Geography, EUROGEO Book Series,2522-8439Environmental geographyGeographyHuman geographyTourismManagementIntegrated GeographyRegional GeographyHuman GeographyTourism ManagementEnvironmental geography.Geography.Human geography.Tourism.Management.Integrated Geography.Regional Geography.Human Geography.Tourism Management.910Malatesta Stefano269608MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9911049220203321Seasonal Island Geographies: The Human Geography of Italian Small Islands4534528UNINA