Xizang Qinghai Gansu Shaanxi

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Xizang Qinghai Gansu Shaanxi 99° 100° 101° 102° 103° 104° 105° 106° 107° Ruo`ergai QINGHAI GANSU Nanping SHAANXI 33° CHINA Aba Hongyuan Songpan Qingchuan Pingwu Guangyuan Shi Nanjiang Seda Wangcang Rangtang Heishui Tongjiang 32° Dege Ganzi 32° Ma`erkang Jiangyou Beichuan Jiange Cangxi Maoxian Bazhong Zitong Pingchang Anxian Li Xian Langzhong Luhuo Jinchuan Mianyang Shi Mianzhu Yilong Nanbu Dax Shifang Yanting Wenchuan Deyang Shi Yingshan Baiyu Xiaojin Pengzhou Da X 31° Santai Xichong Dujiangyan Peng`an 31° Xinlong Danba Guanghan Qu Xian Shehong Daofu Zhongjiang Pi Xian Xindu Nanchong Chongqing Wenjiang Jintang Pengxi Dazhu CHENGDU Dayi Nanchong Guang`an Baoxing Chengdu Shi Yuechi Qionglai Xinjin Shuangliu Suining Shi Wusheng Lushan Jianyang 105° 106°Huaying 107° Lezhi Linshui Dianjia Pengshan XIZANG Pujiang 70°E 80°E 90°E 100°E 110°E 120°E 130°E Tongnan Hechuan Mingshan Ziyang RUSSIAN FEDERATION 99° 100° 101° Tianquan Meishan Danleng 30° Anyue Changshou Renshou KAZAKHSTAN Litang Yajiang Kangding Ya`an Shi Batang Jiangbei HEILONGJIANG CHINA Qingshen Zizhong Tongliang Jiajiang MONGOLIA Luding 4 Yingjing 0°N KYRGYZ JILIN Fuling RAPID ASSESSMENT OF CHEMICAL Weiyuan REP. Dazu Jingyan TA Neijiang Shi JI Hongya KIS Bishan TA LIAONING N XINJIANG ChongqingNEI MONGOL Shi D.P.R. 40°N CONTAMINATION OF THE Emeishan Rongchang BEIJING Rong Xian BEIJINGBa Xian KOREA Leshan Shi Longchang TIANJIN WENCHUAN EARTHQUAKE Hanyuan HEBEI REP. OF A Yongchuan I Zigong Shi X KOREA G SHANXI N Xiangcheng Shimian Qianwei I SHANDONG QINGHAI N Nanchuan 30°N Fushun GANSU JIANGSU JAPAN 29° EPICENTER JiangjinSHAANXI HENAN XIZANG Lu Xian Ebian 29° 29° Muchuan SHANGHAI 30°N PROJECT TARGET COUNTIES Ganluo Yibin Xian HUBEI ANHUI Jiulong Nanxi Chengdu Qijiang Luzhou Shi ZHEJIANG 80°E SICHUANHejiang OTHER HARD-HITDaocheng COUNTIES Mabian This mapYibin was Shi produced by the Map CHONGQINGHUNAN Mianning JIANGXI Pingshan Design Unit of The WorldJiang`an Bank. The FUJIAN Derong boundaries, colors, denominations GUIZHOU PROVINCE CAPITAL Naxi IBRD 36244 0 25 50 Kilometers and any other information shown on Yuexi YUNNAN TAIWAN this map do notChangning imply, on the part of GUANGXI GUANGDONG JUNE 2008 COUNTY BOUNDARIES TheGao World Xian Bank Group, any judgment HONG KONG Meigu 20°N VIETNAM MACAO 20°N Muli 0 0 50 Miles on the legal status of any territory, or PROVINCE BOUNDARIES Leibo any endorsement or acceptance of LAO P. D . R . 99° 100° 101° 102° 103° 104° such boundaries. Xingwen HAINAN PHILIPPINES Xide Gong Xian 90°EXuyong 100°E 110°E 120°E.
Recommended publications
  • M6.9 Southern Qinghai, China Earthquake of 13 April 2010 Network
    U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR EARTHQUAKE SUMMARY MAP XXX U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Prepared in cooperation with the Global Seismographic M6.9 Southern Qinghai, China Earthquake of 13 April 2010 Network Epicentral Region L. B Tectonic Setting alka 90° 92° 94° 96° 98° 100° 102° 104° 106° 70° sh 80° 90° 100° 110° 120° M O N G O L I A GOLMUD Shymkent Changchun Jilin Xinjiang Minhe Dzhambul Almaty 36° QABQA 2001 Urumqi LANZHOU Tashkent Bishkek 36° NamanganK ATE Fushun Y R T i a PL Gulistan G Y n S h a n MUR Kanggye Southern Qinghai Ningxia Z S T A 40° Andizhan A N Shenyang Osh Hamhung K U N L U N Fergana 40° F A U L T Anshan Sinuiju 13 April 2010 23:49:37 UTC Pingliang T Linxia A J Kashi T H Jingning I K I Huhot P'yongyang O R ZIKETAN Neiguanying S T N E A A N Baotou Beijing O R Dalian K 1937 Lintao 33.271° N., 96.629° E. Kulob Tangshan Maying Lung- EUR Kaesong Kagang Depth 10 km AS EXPLANATION shan- IA P H LA l t Tianjin U T Mw = 6.9 (USGS) TE a u Inch`on S O A chen h F R E Ta g Shijiazhuang K O Longxi y n Yinchuan Taiyuan Mag ≥ 7.0 Hezuo K A l t E Felt across the mountaiQnionuasn area in western China, over 400 u AT e PL killed, tens of thousands displaced. n H SIA Gangu RA j Eg U W 0 - 69 km u s n O i n a L TIANSHUI n t a Xining u L H u n Y E Gansu Rawalpindi M o K u n H A l u n F S E 70 - 299 Min Xian Tianshui Islamabad a u l t Lanzhou DAWU I Luoyang Zhengzhou 34° Li Xian M Xi'an 300 - 600 Qinghai Amritsar A C H I N A Tewo 34° Faisalabad TIBETAN PLATEAU Nanjing Volcanoes Lahore g Shanghai Hui-Xian Simla L Hefei in 30° Chandigarh a J A g
    [Show full text]
  • Lithofacies Palaeogeography of the Late Permian Wujiaping Age in the Middle and Upper Yangtze Region, China
    Journal of Palaeogeography 2014, 3(4): 384-409 DOI: 10.3724/SP.J.1261.2014.00063 Lithofacies palaeogeography and sedimentology Lithofacies palaeogeography of the Late Permian Wujiaping Age in the Middle and Upper Yangtze Region, China Jin-Xiong Luo*, You-Bin He, Rui Wang School of Geosciences, Yangtze University, Wuhan 430100, China Abstract The lithofacies palaeogeography of the Late Permian Wujiaping Age in Middle and Upper Yangtze Region was studied based on petrography and the “single factor analysis and multifactor comprehensive mapping” method. The Upper Permian Wujiaping Stage in the Middle and Upper Yangtze Region is mainly composed of carbonate rocks and clastic rocks, with lesser amounts of siliceous rocks, pyroclastic rocks, volcanic rocks and coal. The rocks can be divided into three types, including clastic rock, clastic rock-limestone and lime- stone-siliceous rock, and four fundamental ecological types and four fossil assemblages are recognized in the Wujiaping Stage. Based on a petrological and palaeoecological study, six single factors were selected, namely, thickness (m), content (%) of marine rocks, content (%) of shallow water carbonate rocks, content (%) of biograins with limemud, content (%) of thin- bedded siliceous rocks and content (%) of deep water sedimentary rocks. Six single factors maps of the Wujiaping Stage and one lithofacies palaeogeography map of the Wujiaping Age were composed. Palaeogeographic units from west to east include an eroded area, an alluvial plain, a clastic rock platform, a carbonate rock platform where biocrowds developed, a slope and a basin. In addition, a clastic rock platform exists in the southeast of the study area. Hydro- carbon source rock and reservoir conditions were preliminarily analyzed based on lithofacies palaeogeography.
    [Show full text]
  • Sichuan Q I N G H a I G a N S U Christian Percentage of County/City Ruo'ergai
    Sichuan Q i n g h a i G a n s u Christian Percentage of County/City Ruo'ergai Shiqu Jiuzhaigou S h a a n x i Hongyuan Aba Songpan Chaotian Qingchuan Nanjiang Seda Pingwu Lizhou Rangtang Wangcang Dege Heishui Zhaohua Tongjiang Ma'erkang Ganzi Beichuan Jiangyou Cangxi Wanyuan Mao Jiange Bazhou Enyang Zitong Pingchang Luhuo Jinchuan Li Anzhou Youxian Langzhong Xuanhan Mianzhu Yilong Shifang Fucheng Tongchuan Baiyu Luojiang Nanbu Pengzhou Yangting Xiaojin Jingyang Santai Yingshan Dachuan Danba Dujiangyan Xichong Xinlong Wenchuan Guanghan Peng'an Kaijiang Daofu Shehong Shunqing Qu Pi Xindu Zhongjiang Gaoping Chongzhou Jialing DayiWenjiang Jintang Pengxi Guang'an Dazhu Lushan Daying Yuechi Qianfeng Shuangliu Chuanshan Baoxing Qionglai Huaying T i b e t Batang Xinjin Jianyang Anju Wusheng Pujiang Kangding Pengshan Lezhi Linshui Mingshan Yanjiang Tianquan DanlengDongpo H u b e i Litang Yajiang Yucheng Renshou Anyue Yingjing Qingshen Zizhong Luding Jiajiang Jingyan Hongya Shizhong Weiyuan Dongxing Hanyuan Emeishan Rong Shizhong WutongqiaoGongjing Da'an Longchang C h o n g q i n g Xiangcheng Shimian Jinkouhe Shawan Ziliujing Yantan Ebian Qianwei Lu Jiulong Muchuan Fushun Daocheng Ganluo Longmatan Derong Xuzhou NanxiJiangyang Mabian Pingshan Cuiping Hejiang Percent Christian Naxi Mianning Yuexi Jiang'an Meigu Changning (County/City) Muli Leibo Gao Gong Xide Xingwen 0.8% - 3% Zhaojue Junlian Xuyong Gulin Chengdu area enlarged 3.1% - 4% Xichang Jinyang Qingbaijiang Yanyuan Butuo Pi Puge Xindu 4.1% - 5% Dechang Wenjiang Y u n n a n Jinniu Chenghua Qingyang 5.1% - 6% Yanbian Ningnan Miyi G u i z h o u Wuhou Longquanyi 6.1% - 8.8% Renhe Jinjiang Xi Dong Huidong Shuangliu Renhe Huili Disputed boundary with India Data from Asia Harvest, www.asiaharvest.org.
    [Show full text]
  • Report on the 8Th International Congress on the Jurassic System Shehong of Suining, Sichuan, China, August 2010
    Volumina Jurassica, 2010, Viii: 165–170 Report on the 8th International Congress on the Jurassic System Shehong of Suining, Sichuan, China, August 2010 Nicol MORTON1 (Former Chairman of ISJS) In September 2006, towards the end of the 7th Jurassic Congress in Kraków, Poland, we received a passionate invitation from Jingeng SHA on behalf of his scientific colleagues for the 8th Jurassic Congress to be held in Shehong of Suining, Sichuan, China. The invitation also had the enthusiastic support of representatives, who were present, of government at local, provincial and national levels. They promised that the resources for organisation and financial support would not be lacking. At the time some of us wondered if they could possibly be able to fulfil all their promises! In August 2010 they delivered! No expense was spared to make us feel welcome and to enable an excellent and success- ful Congress to be held. Quite clearly the Organising Committee had expended an enormous amount of time and resources on the organisation and a complex set of arrangements. They are to be congratulated for the success of their hard work. Before the Congress there was slight disquiet as to whether the strong governmental input on the organisation might influence the scientific emphasis of the Congress. It did not. The impression was that our hosts were genuinely delighted and honoured by our presence. Of course, it was used to promote tourism in the area, for example several references to the Jurassic Congress in the Air China inflight magazine! On the other hand, this was also superb positive publicity for the Congress and for research on Jurassic stratigraphy and palaeontology.
    [Show full text]
  • Expressways, GDP, and the Environment: the Case of China
    Expressways, GDP, and the Environment: The Case of China Guojun He Hong Kong University of Science and Technology [email protected] Yang Xie University of California, Riverside [email protected] Bing Zhang Nanjing University [email protected] We are indebted to the Editor in Chief, Andrew Foster, and the anonymous referee for their valuable suggestions. We thank Hunt Allcott, Michael Anderson, Richard Arnott, Chong-En Bai, Michael Bates, David Brady, Nathaniel Baum-Snow, Cyndi Berck, Peter Berck, Judd Boomhower, David Brady, Jimmy Chan, Gordon Dahl, Anil Deolalikar, Alain de Janvry, Ozkan Eren, Thibault Fally, Jingting Fan, Fred Finan, Shihe Fu, Joshua Graff Zivin, Michael Greenstone, Jie He, Steven Helfand, Sarojini Hirshleifer, Wei Huang, Ruixue Jia, Larry Karp, Bree Lang, Matt Lang, Bryan Leonard, Weijia Li, Jeremy Magruder, Aprajit Mahajan, John Matsusaka, Daniel McMillen, Helene Ollivier, Albert Park, Martino Pelli, Jeffrey Perloff, Obie Porteous, Han Qi, David Rapson, Elisabeth Sadoulet, Ruoyao Shi, Leo Simon, Michael Song, Kenneth Small, Qu Tang, Itai Trilnick, Reed Walker, Shaoda Wang, Brian Wright, Yanhui Wu, Yiqing Xu, Jia Yan, and participants in seminars and workshops at CU Boulder, CUHK, Fudan University, HKBU, HKUST, Peking University, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Singapore Management University, Tsinghua University, UC Berkeley, UC Riverside, Université de Sherbrooke, and USC and the 2017 AERE Summer Conference, CAERE Annual Conference, CES Annual Conference, EAERE Annual Conference, Econometric Society Asian Meeting, and Fudan–UC Social Science and China Studies Young Scholar Conference for their valuable comments. Yuhang Pan, Xiaoxiao Shen, Chun Wai Cheung, Ziteng Lei, Tingjun Man, and Jing Yang offered excellent research assistance.
    [Show full text]
  • The Survey on the Distribution of MC Fei and Xiao Initial Groups in Chinese Dialects
    IALP 2020, Kuala Lumpur, Dec 4-6, 2020 The Survey on the Distribution of MC Fei and Xiao Initial Groups in Chinese Dialects Yan Li Xiaochuan Song School of Foreign Languages, School of Foreign Languages, Shaanxi Normal University, Shaanxi Normal University Xi’an, China /Henan Agricultural University e-mail: [email protected] Xi’an/Zhengzhou, China e-mail:[email protected] Abstract — MC Fei 非 and Xiao 晓 initial group discussed in this paper includes Fei 非, Fu groups are always mixed together in the southern 敷 and Feng 奉 initials, but does not include Wei part of China. It can be divided into four sections 微, while MC Xiao 晓 initial group includes according to the distribution: the northern area, the Xiao 晓 and Xia 匣 initials. The third and fourth southwestern area, the southern area, the class of Xiao 晓 initial group have almost southeastern area. The mixing is very simple in the palatalized as [ɕ] which doesn’t mix with Fei northern area, while in Sichuan it is the most initial group. This paper mainly discusses the first extensive and complex. The southern area only and the second class of Xiao and Xia initials. The includes Hunan and Guangxi where ethnic mixing of Fei and Xiao initials is a relatively minorities gather, and the mixing is very recent phonetic change, which has no direct complicated. Ancient languages are preserved in the inheritance with the phonological system of southeastern area where there are still bilabial Qieyun. The mixing mainly occurs in the southern sounds and initial consonant [h], but the mixing is part of the mainland of China.
    [Show full text]
  • Lanzhou-Chongqing Railway Development – Resettlement Action Plan Monitoring Report No
    Resettlement Monitoring Report Project Number: 35354 April 2010 PRC: Lanzhou-Chongqing Railway Development – Resettlement Action Plan Monitoring Report No. 1 Prepared by: CIECC Overseas Consulting Co., Ltd Beijing, PRC For: Ministry of Railways This report has been submitted to ADB by the Ministry of Railways and is made publicly available in accordance with ADB’s public communications policy (2005). It does not necessarily reflect the views of ADB. The People’s Republic of China ADB Loan Lanzhou—Chongqing RAILWAY PROJECT EXTERNAL MONITORING & EVALUATION OF RESETTLEMENT ACTION PLAN Report No.1 Prepared by CIECC OVERSEAS CONSULTING CO.,LTD April 2010 Beijing 10 ADB LOAN EXTERNAL Monitoring Report– No. 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS PREFACE 4 OVERVIEW..................................................................................................................................................... 5 1. PROJECT BRIEF DESCRIPTION .......................................................................................................................7 2. PROJECT AND RESETTLEMENT PROGRESS ................................................................................................10 2.1 PROJECT PROGRESS ...............................................................................................................................10 2.2 LAND ACQUISITION, HOUSE DEMOLITION AND RESETTLEMENT PROGRESS..................................................10 3. MONITORING AND EVALUATION .................................................................................................................14
    [Show full text]
  • CHANGING the WORLD with LITHIUM Tianqi Lithium Sustainability Report 2017
    Tianqi Lithium Sustainability Report 2017 Report Tianqi Lithium Sustainability CHANGING THE WORLD WITH LITHIUM Tianqi Lithium Sustainability Report 2017 Tianqi Lithium Corporation Add: No. 10 East Gaopeng Road, Hi-Tech Development Zone, Chengdu, Sichuan, 610041 China Tel: +86 28 8514 6615 www.tianqilithium.com CONTENTS Voices from the Executives 1 Committment to Highest 23 Environment, Safety Heading for a and Occupational Health Sustainable Future 3 Standards Environmental protection 25 The SDGs: metrics for action 4 Safety 32 Employee health 34 Sustainability at Tianqi 5 Tianqi's CSR 11 Taking Good Care of 35 Management System Stakeholders The guiding principles 13 Investor rights and interests 37 The strategy 13 Excellent customer services 39 The governance structure 15 Strong supplier community 41 The communication 16 Employment development 42 The components 17 Listening to stakeholders' voices 47 The implementation 18 SUPERMARKET 超市 Social Services and 57 Appendix Leading the Industry Public Benefits 67 Adding Value 51 19 Promoting technological innovations 53 Targeted poverty alleviation 59 About the report 67 Sustained market leading position 21 Leading the industry 55 Social responsibility overseas 65 Feedback form 68 Robust earnings growth 21 2017 TIANQI LITHIUM SUSTAINABILITY REPORT Voices from the Executives JIANG Weiping, Chairman There is no doubt that incorporating social responsibility is crucial for Tianqi Lithium. We will contribute our efforts to serve the world's new energy industry together with our peers at home and
    [Show full text]
  • December 1998
    JANUARY - DECEMBER 1998 SOURCE OF REPORT DATE PLACE NAME ALLEGED DS EX 2y OTHER INFORMATION CRIME Hubei Daily (?) 16/02/98 04/01/98 Xiangfan C Si Liyong (34 yrs) E 1 Sentenced to death by the Xiangfan City Hubei P Intermediate People’s Court for the embezzlement of 1,700,00 Yuan (US$20,481,9). Yunnan Police news 06/01/98 Chongqing M Zhang Weijin M 1 1 Sentenced by Chongqing No. 1 Intermediate 31/03/98 People’s Court. It was reported that Zhang Sichuan Legal News Weijin murdered his wife’s lover and one of 08/05/98 the lover’s relatives. Shenzhen Legal Daily 07/01/98 Taizhou C Zhang Yu (25 yrs, teacher) M 1 Zhang Yu was convicted of the murder of his 01/01/99 Zhejiang P girlfriend by the Taizhou City Intermediate People’s Court. It was reported that he had planned to kill both himself and his girlfriend but that the police had intervened before he could kill himself. Law Periodical 19/03/98 07/01/98 Harbin C Jing Anyi (52 yrs, retired F 1 He was reported to have defrauded some 2600 Liaoshen Evening News or 08/01/98 Heilongjiang P teacher) people out of 39 million Yuan 16/03/98 (US$4,698,795), in that he loaned money at Police Weekend News high rates of interest (20%-60% per annum). 09/07/98 Southern Daily 09/01/98 08/01/98 Puning C Shen Guangyu D, G 1 1 Convicted of the murder of three children - Guangdong P Lin Leshan (f) M 1 1 reported to have put rat poison in sugar and 8 unnamed Us 8 8 oatmeal and fed it to the three children of a man with whom she had a property dispute.
    [Show full text]
  • Download File
    On the Periphery of a Great “Empire”: Secondary Formation of States and Their Material Basis in the Shandong Peninsula during the Late Bronze Age, ca. 1000-500 B.C.E Minna Wu Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences COLUMIBIA UNIVERSITY 2013 @2013 Minna Wu All rights reserved ABSTRACT On the Periphery of a Great “Empire”: Secondary Formation of States and Their Material Basis in the Shandong Peninsula during the Late Bronze-Age, ca. 1000-500 B.C.E. Minna Wu The Shandong region has been of considerable interest to the study of ancient China due to its location in the eastern periphery of the central culture. For the Western Zhou state, Shandong was the “Far East” and it was a vast region of diverse landscape and complex cultural traditions during the Late Bronze-Age (1000-500 BCE). In this research, the developmental trajectories of three different types of secondary states are examined. The first type is the regional states established by the Zhou court; the second type is the indigenous Non-Zhou states with Dong Yi origins; the third type is the states that may have been formerly Shang polities and accepted Zhou rule after the Zhou conquest of Shang. On the one hand, this dissertation examines the dynamic social and cultural process in the eastern periphery in relation to the expansion and colonization of the Western Zhou state; on the other hand, it emphasizes the agency of the periphery during the formation of secondary states by examining how the polities in the periphery responded to the advances of the Western Zhou state and how local traditions impacted the composition of the local material assemblage which lay the foundation for the future prosperity of the regional culture.
    [Show full text]
  • 3 PRESENT CONDITION of ROADS and TRANSPORT 3.1 Condition of Road Facilities 3.1.1 Existing Road Network and Classification of R
    3 PRESENT CONDITION OF ROADS AND TRANSPORT 3.1 Condition of Road Facilities 3.1.1 Existing Road Network and Classification of Roads (1) Primary Road Network in the Study Area As shown in Figure 3.1.1, the existing Primary Road network in the Study Area considers the Tianfu Square as its center and is made up of ring roads and radial roads. There are 5 ring roads at present including the existing roads and roads under construction. The existing roads include the Inner Ring Road with a radius of 2 km, the 1st Ring Road with a radius of 3 km, and the 2nd Ring Road with a radius of 4 km. There are two roads under construction, namely the 3rd Ring Road with a radius of 7 km, and the Outer Ring Road with a radius of 11 km. The construction of these two roads is underway, and most exits for expressways and main carriageway have been constructed already. It is expected that the 3rd Ring Road and the Outer Ring Road will be completed by 2001 and 2002, respectively. The Inner Ring Road has four lanes for both directions with a total road width of 25 m. The 1st Ring Road and 2nd Ring Road have not only four lanes for both directions but also a segregated bicycle lane on both sides with a total width of 40 m. Furthermore, the 3rd Ring Road and the Outer Ring Road under construction have 8 lanes and 6 lanes for both directions, respectively, with a total width of 80m.
    [Show full text]
  • Shehong of Suining, Sichuan Province, China
    GEOLOGICA CARPATHICA, OCTOBER 2010, 61, 5, 382 The 8th International Congress on the Jurassic System Shehong of Suining, Sichuan Province, China Shehong of Suining near Chengdu was the location of the 8th International Congress on the Jurassic System held from August, 2nd to 22nd, 2010. Sichuan, the home of the giant panda and Chinese dragons, is a splendid land in SW China below the Tibetan Plateau. This province is famous for its historical, cultural, as well as geoscientific resources, including five UNESCO World Culture and Natural Heritage sites. Suining, a city with profound cultural relics, such as the Lingquan Temple of the Sui Dynasty, the Guangde Temple of the Tang Dynasty, and the hometown of Guanying Buddha, is important for stratotypes of the Upper Jurassic “Suining-“ and “Penglaizhen” formations. Shehong, administratively attached to Suining City, with a population of over one million inhabitants is close to three major cities including Chengdu, Chongqing and Mianyang. It is the hometown of Chen Zi’ang, a famous poet of the Tang Dynasty. The Shehong National Geopark of Jurassic Petrified Forest is located nearby. All the Congress sessions were arranged in the Fuluowan Hotel in Shehong, a beautiful lake-side hotel surrounded by Upper Jurassic outcrops along the Fujiang River. The Jurassic Congress was initiated by the International Union of Geological Sciences, and by the Jurassic Branch of the International Commission on Stratigraphy and funded by UNESCO. It was the first time the event has been held in the Asia-Pacific region. The “marine and non-marine Jurassic System” was the central theme of the Congress.
    [Show full text]