The Caucasus and the Caspian Basin: Topography of Deep Seismic Boundaries

2021 ◽  
Vol 57 (4) ◽  
pp. 479-491
Author(s):  
L. P. Vinnik ◽  
G. L. Kosarev ◽  
L. I. Makeyeva ◽  
S. I. Oreshin
1881 ◽  
Vol 12 (288supp) ◽  
pp. 4589-4589
Author(s):  
MM. P. Schutzenberger ◽  
N. Toniner
Keyword(s):  

Afghanistan ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 141-181 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claude Rapin ◽  
Frantz Grenet
Keyword(s):  

This paper concerns the cartography of Afghanistan in antiquity using the example of Ortospana, a toponym that is presumably a corruption of *Oryospana, the ancient name of Ghazni. In order to cover all the hypotheses involved in this study, the itinerary of Alexander will also be revisited from southern and northern Afghanistan to Taxila through the crossroads of Alexandria in the Caucasus and along the Kabul River.


Author(s):  
Natalya A. Lejbova ◽  
Umalat B. Gadiev

Although population of the Caucasus has been studied in a rather detailed way, there are peoples whose anthropological portrait is still incomplete. Among them are the Ingush, one of the oldest autochthonous peoples of the Caucasus. This work presents new material on the dental anthropology of medieval Ingush, collected in 2017 during expeditions to the Jairakh and Sunzhen districts of the Republic of Ingushetia. In the Jairakh district, the investigations were carried out in the crypt complexes of the 15th–18th centuries – Targim, Agikal, Tsori, Salgi, and in Sunzhen region - in crypts near the village of Muzgan. The craniological series of medieval Ingush studied according to the dental anthropology program can be described as belonging to the western range of odontological complexes. Unlike most modern Caucasian groups, it does not belong to gracile forms, but rather to a maturized odontological variant, which has deep roots in the Caucasus. The results once again demonstrate a certain conservatism and stability of the dental system, which preserves morphological traits of ancestral groups longer than other anthropological systems.


2016 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 36-52
Author(s):  
Michael Pittman

G. I. Gurdjieff (c.1866–1949) was born in Gyumri, Armenia and raised in the Caucasus and eastern Asia Minor. He also traveled extensively throughout Turkey to places of pilgrimage and in search of Sufi teachers. Through the lens of Gurdjieff’s notion of legominism, or the means by which spiritual teachings are transmitted from successive generations, this article explores the continuing significance of spiritual practice and tradition and the ways that these forms remain relevant in shaping contemporary trends in spirituality. Beginning with Gurdjieff’s use of legominism, the article provides reflection on some early findings done in field research in Turkey— through site visits, interviews and participant-observation—conducted in the summers of 2014 and 2015. The aim of the project is both to meet individuals and groups, particularly connected to Sufism, that may have some contact with the influences that Gurdjieff would have been familiar with, and to visit some of the sites that were part of Gurdjieff’s early background and which served to inform his work. Considerations of contemporary practices include the view of spiritual transmission, and practices of pilgrimage, prayer and sohbet, or spiritual conversation, in an ongoing discourse about spiritual transformation.


Author(s):  
Vitaliy Victorovich Barabanov ◽  
Gennadij Grigor'evich Kolosyuk

Fisheries measures is an instrument allowing to regulate fish catch pressing to the aquatic bio-resources stocks. Roach and sheatfish are the species which are exploited in industrial and amateur fisheries of the Volga-Caspian basin (the Astrakhan region). According to the Fishery Regulations, today the minimum allowable length for roach is 17 centimeters, and for sheatfish it is 60 centimeters. According to the results of retrospective analysis of stocks dynamics, commercial catch of roach and cheatfish, experience in changing fisheries measures for roach and sheatfish in the Volga-Caspian basin, changing fisheries measures for these species has been found inexpedient. The current fisheries measures for commercial catch of roach allows to exploit only the reproductive part of the population, minimizing losses of restocking. Also, the work shows that a change of fisheries measures for sheatfish will lead to the decrease of the commercial catch of sheatfish and objects of its ration. In general, it must be stressed that changing fisheries measures will lead to redistribution of roach and sheatfish catches between the main participants (commercial fishers, amateur fishers and poachers), but not in favor of the official fish catching


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