scholarly journals Technological and social change in a Madurese fishing village (1978-2004)

Author(s):  
Anke Niehof ◽  
Roy Jordaan ◽  
Affandy Santoso

This article is about recent changes in Pasean, a fishing village on the north coast of the island of Madura, Indonesia (see maps). The village has been described in detail in several publications based on research carried out in the area during 1977-1979, and a short visit in 1982. In May-August 2004, we did fieldwork for a restudy. In this article we report our findings on the changes in Pasean during the past 26 years. The article starts with a description of general changes. The second part deals more specifically with changes in Pasean’s fishing economy. Attention is paid to technological innovations, fishing methods, and trading patterns both within and outside fishery. A number of socio-economic changes, such as those in the division of labour and catches, are demonstrably related to the introduction of new technologies in fishery, but other social changes are less clearly technology-driven. An example of the latter is the klotok, a new type of perahu, the introduction of which was facilitated by the altered social circumstances and individualistic life-style of Pasean fishermen.

1883 ◽  
Vol 35 (224-226) ◽  
pp. 155-161 ◽  

The specimens to which the following note refers were dredged in the Faroë Channel in the autumn of last year, during the cruise of H. M. S. “Triton,” and were sent to me for examination by Mr. John Murray, F. R. S. E., under whose direction the scientific observations of the expedition were carried out. It is now a well-known fact that the region lying between the north coast of Scotland and the Faroë Islands possesses certain features of unusual interest owing to the existence, side by side, of two sharply defined areas, of which the bottom temperature differs to the extent of 16° or 17° Fahr. The depth of the two areas is very similar, ranging from 450 to 640 fathom s, and they are separated by a narrow ridge having an average depth of about 250 fathoms. The physical aspects of this phenomenon have been the subject of much discussion, and the biological conditions attendant thereupon are of almost equal importance; indeed, so far as the Rhizopoda are concerned, there are few areas of the same extent that have so well repaid the labour of investigation. On the 44 "Lightning” Expedition of 1868, supei-intended by Dr. Carpenter and Sir Wyville Thomson, the cold area furnished amongst other interesting organisms, the large Lituoline Foraminifer Reophax sabulosa , a form which has since been obtained near the same point on the cruise of the "Knight Errant," but has never been met with elsewhere. The warm area yielded at the same time Astrorhiza arenaria , a large sandy species previously unknown to British naturalists. On the "Porcupine” Expedition of 1869, another modification of the latter genus, Astrorhiza crassatina was obtained in the cold area; and near the boundary line an entirely new arenaceous type was dredged, to which the generic named Botellina has been assigned by Dr. Carpenter. From the fact that all the specimens of the form appeared more or less broken, it has been inferred that the tests were adherent when living; but the fragments were abundant and consisted of stout tubes, many of them upwards of an inch in length, the interior being subdivided by a labyrinth of irregular sandy partitions. More recently, in 1880, on the cruise of the “K night Errant,” the rare genus Storthosphœra was found in the warm region and in the cold area specimens of Cornusjpira which measured more than an inch in diameter, rivalling in size the finest of the tropical Orbitolites, and therefore amongst the largest known Porcellanoug Foraminifera.


1915 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 15-27 ◽  
Author(s):  
H.C. Sargent

The subject of this paper is a group of three intrusive masses of igneous rock, possibly laccolitic in their origin, whose outcrops are situated within a radius of a mile from the village of Llanfairfechan, on the north coast of Carnarvonshire.


NALARs ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 69 ◽  
Author(s):  
Primi Artiningrum ◽  
Danto Sukmajati

ABSTRAK.Masyarakat Bugis terkenal sebagai pelaut ulung di Indonesia yang telah menjelajahi seluruh wilayah nusantara.Oleh karena itu permukiman masyarakat Bugis dapat ditemukan di hampir seluruh wilayah Indonesia, terutama di kawasan pesisir.Di pantai Utara Jakarta juga terdapat satu kampung nelayan Bugis, yaitu di wilayah Kamal Muara.Karakter fisik dari permukiman ini menunjukkan ciri-ciri arsitektur vernacular Bugis yang dapat dilihat dari bentuk rumah-rumahnya.Akan tetapi, kondisi lingkungan yang berbeda dengan di tempat asalnya memaksa masyarakat kampung Bugis tersebut untuk beradaptasi baik terhadap lingkungan fisik maupun lingkungan sosial budayanya.Adaptasi tersebut menyebabkan terjadinya perubahan-perubahan pada bentuk dan pola perkampungannya.Penelitian ini bertujuan untuk mengungkapkan pengaruh adaptasi terhadap bentuk rumah dan pola kampung yang dibandingkan dengan arsitektur Bugis yang asli.Metode yang digunakan adalah metode penelitian deskriptif kualitatif.Metode pengumpulan data dilakukan melalui observasi lapangan dan wawancara kepada informan kunci termasuk beberapa pemilik rumah.Hasil dari penelitian ini adalah teridentifikasinya adapatasi bentuk arsitektur dan pola kampung terkait dengan kondisi lingkungan dan sosial budaya. Kata  kunci : adaptasi, vernakular, arsitektur, nelayan, kampung ABSTRACT.Bugis people are famous as the best sailor in Indonesia who have sailed all over the archipelago. Their settlements can be found all over the country especially in the coastal area. Kamal Muara is one of the Bugis fishermen village located in the North coast of Jakarta. The physical character of this settlement demonstrates Bugis vernacular architecture which is especially noticeable in the form of its houses. However, the new place has forced the people to adapt to the physical environment as well as to the social and cultural environment. Consequently, the adaptation caused changes of architectural shapes and the pattern of the village. This objective of this research was to find out the influence of the adaptation to the house form and village pattern that was compared to its original Bugis Architecture. The method of this research was qualitative descriptive research. The data was collected through field study, observation, and interview to the key informants including the owner of the houses. The outcomes of this research is the identification of the adaptation in architectural form and village pattern related to the environmental condition and the sociocultural problem. Keywords:  adaptation, vernacular, architecture, fishermen, village


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 131-136
Author(s):  
Wisnu Adjie Pramudito ◽  
Jusup Suprijanto ◽  
Nirwani Soenardjo

ABSTRAK: Hutan Mangrove merupakan salah satu ekosistem vegetasi yang berada di wilayah pasang surut di pesisir, pantai dan pulau-pulau kecil. Pantai utara Jawa merupakan salah satu wilayah yang memiliki ekosistem mangrove yang mengalami perubahan cukup signifikan. Pertambahan luasan vegetasi mangrove di desa Bedono dapat diamati dengan menggunakan citra dari satelit landsat. Tujuan dari penelitian ini adalah untuk mengetahui perubahan luas lahan mangrove yang terjadi di kawasan pesisir Desa Bedono, Kecamatan Sayung, kabupaten Demak Tahun 2009 dan 2019. Metode yang diaplikasikan dalam penelitian  dengan menggunakan metode deskriptif eksploratif, metode yang memiliki tujuan yaitu melakukan pemecahan masalah yang digali secara luas tentang sebab-sebab atau hal-hal yang mempengaruhi terjadinya sesuatu berdasarkan fakta-fakta yang terjadi di lapangan. Untuk kegiatan groundcheck menggunakan metode sampling kuadrat yaitu membuat plot berukuran 10x10 m untuk kategori pohon yang di dalamnya terdapat subplot 5x5 m untuk kategori sapling dan 1x1 m untuk kategori seedling. Hasil penelitian menunjukkan pertambahan luas lahan mangrove di Desa Bedono selama rentang waktu tahun 2009 – 2019, pada tahun 2009 sebesar 122.58 ha dan pada tahun 2019 sebesar 197.19 ha . luas vegetasi dalam kurun waktu tersebut mengalami pertambahan luas sebesar 74.76 ha. kerapatan di titik stasiun 1 memiliki kerapatan sebesar 3633 ind/ha, sementara di titik stasiun 2 dan 3 masing masing sebesar 3700 ind/ha dan 3500 ind/ha. Tiga spesies mangrove yang dapat ditemukan di kawasan mangrove desa Bedono adalah Avicennia marina, Avicennia alba, dan Rhizopora mucronata. ABSTRACT: Mangrove forest is one of the vegetation ecosystems in the tidal areas on the coast, beaches and small islands. The north coast of Java is one of the regions that has a significant change in mangrove ecosystems. Changes in the extent of mangrove vegetation in the village of Bedono can be observed using imagery from the Landsat satellite. The purpose of this study was to assess changes occurred mangrove vegetation in coastal areas Bedono Village, District Sayung, Demak district in 2009 and 2019. The method applied in research using exploratory descriptive method, a method which has the goal of solving the problem are explored extensively on the causes or matters affecting the occurrence of something based on facts on the ground. For groundcheck activity using sampling methods squares that make plots measuring 10x10 m for the category tree in which there are subplots 5x5 m for category sampling and 1x1 m for category seedling. The results showed an increase in the area of mangrove land in the village of Bedono during the span of years 2009-2019, in 2009 amounted to 122.58 ha and in 2019 amounted to 197.19 ha the area of vegetation in this period experienced an increase in area of 74.76 ha. density at station 1 has a density of 3633 ind/ha, while at station 2 and 3 points respectively 3700 ind/ha and 3500 ind/ha. Mangrove species that can be found in the mangrove area of Bedono village are Avicennia marina, Avicennia alba, and Rhizopora mucronata.


Author(s):  
Nanang Ganda Prawira ◽  
Arief Johari ◽  
Mega Fitriani Adiwarna Prawira ◽  
Eko Susanto

The tourism development on Plentong Beach, Ujunggebang Village, Sukra District, Indramayu Regency has shown a positive impact on socio-economic and ecological conditions in this region. Collaboration between the Village Government, BUMDES Maju Ujunggebang and the community has been able to turn Plentong Beach into an inclusive tourist destination for the people of the North Coast of West Java. To expand marketing communication and provide visual identity, a visual branding product was designed in Community Service activities by applying the Design Thinking method through observation, interviews, and Focus Group Discussions. This activity has succeeded in designing a visual branding product that will be applied to souvenir products according to the needs and interests of partners. In the future, it is necessary to develop visual branding on marketing communication media in the form of websites, signage, and social media to expand the popularity of Plentong Beach which in turn attracts more visits from wider demographic and geographic segments for the advancement of destinations and people on Plentong Beach.


2019 ◽  
Vol 125 ◽  
pp. 09003
Author(s):  
Sri Indrahti ◽  
Bintang Andini

Jepara has many handicrafts. One of them is monel craft which requires special skills, family business management and from generation to generation. The traditional management seems to have survived in 2010-2015. This is due to the skill in pursuing monel craft, studied non-formally, through learning the way of apprenticeship. In production activities, monel craft is also followed by students who are also active participants who directly learn and practice at the location of the craft. The development of monel handicrafts in Jepara experienced periods that could be said to be increasing. Starting from the family business, it is not a barrier to the development of monel crafts that grow from one family to another. The business network carried out more utilizes social gatherings that exist in the village community, including the tradition of mutual friendship between residents, neighborhood association social meetings and recitation. This container is used as a means to exchange information about the development of craft models that are in demand by the market and its marketing information. The marketing method has not yet developed, because it relies more on the local market while benefiting from the existence of Jepara as a tourist city.


1905 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 145-150 ◽  
Author(s):  
Howard Fox

I Contributed a paper to the April number of the Geological Magazine for 1900 on the geology and fossils of the Devonian rocks on the north coast of Cornwall, south of the River Camel. In the present communication I propose to notice a series of fossils which I have lately obtained from the slaty rocks of Devonian age in the parish of St. Minver on the north of the Camel, which, from Trewornan, one mile north of Wadebridge, for the lower five miles of its course as river and estuary, forms the southern and south-western boundary of this parish. The open sea-coast forms its northern and north-western boundary, extending from the easterly limit at the Cove of Port Quin, the site of an old but now forsaken fishing village, about eight miles south-west of King Arthur's Castle, Tintagel, westwards round the basaltic cliffs of Pentire Head, and thence in a southerly direction to the estuary of the Camel.


1945 ◽  
Vol 41 ◽  
pp. 54-68
Author(s):  
John L. Myres

The village of Lefkóniko lies on the north side of the Mesariá plain, on the main or ‘upper’ road from Nicosía (21 miles) to Tríkomo (9 miles) for the Karpass promontory. Cross-roads connect Lefkóniko northwards by Platáni (5 miles) with Akanthoú on the north coast; south-westward with Yénagra ( miles) on the alternative ‘old’ or ‘lower’ road from Nicosía to Tríkomo; southwards, through the double village Peristeróna-Piyí, with Prastió (6 miles) on the north bank of the main channel of the Pidiás river. The Gephýria stream, descending from the North Range, crosses the Tríkomo road 2 miles east of Lefkóniko, and skirts the limestone plateau which was the home-territory of ancient Salamis swerving south-east beyond Peristeróna-Piyí and joining a loop of the main river at Styllos, 4 miles east of Prastió, and about half-way to the sea.


2018 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 151
Author(s):  
Widhyanto Muttaqien

Population growth in coastal areas, especially as a result of migration, has put pressure on the environment, both the built environment and the community management environment in implementing sustainable livelihood strategies. This paper wishes to explain two models of community adaptation in two distinct areas, namely Morodemak Village on the north coast of Central Java, which began to recede in the management of common resources, and Kawa Village in Seram Barat coast, which is still strong in maintaining the tradition of coastal and terrestrial territorial management as a common resource. The research methodology used in this research is qualitative approach, with semi structured interview and focus group discussion. From the results of the study, it was revealed that people were able to reshape their resources based on ecological and social changes, as their adaptation strategy in sustaining sustainable livelihoods.


2019 ◽  
Vol 56 (3) ◽  
pp. 311-337 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ilanit Loewy Shacham

In modern literary histories of Telugu literature, no period shines as bright as King Kṛṣṇadevarāya’s reign (1509–29). This period is noted for its bustling literary court from which a significant part of the Telugu canon emerged. These works, commonly referred to as the prabandhas, are often characterised as the Telugu counterpart of the Sanskrit mahākāvya/court poem and within this context, Kṛṣṇadevarāya’s reign is called ‘the golden age’ of Telugu literature and the ‘age of prabandha’. Close examination of the prabandhas indicates that despite common influences from Sanskrit and Telugu literature, each of the prabandhas, takes a radically different approach to poetry, convention, and language, and is innovative in extremely diverse ways.  As a case study, this article uses Kṛṣṇadevarāya’s own celebrated Telugu poem, the Āmuktamālyada. Though Kṛṣṇadevarāya uses many of the conventions associated with Sanskrit courtly culture in general and with the mahākāvya in particular, he does so in unconventional ways. He gives everyday life a new, prominent role (previously unavailable to it in mahākāvyas) and is able to do so by creating a new type of division of labour between Sanskrit and Telugu. He also integrates new poetic realms such as the village and temple into the so-called courtly settings, creating a new mode of narration. Thus, examined outside the context of the golden age of the Telugu prabandha, the Āmuktamālyada emerges as a work in which previous schemes of power are inverted: the periphery and so-called margins—social, geographic, linguistic, and religious—create a new core which in turn, reflects Kṛṣṇadevarāya’s unique personal and political worldview.


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